by James C. Sherlock
On 29 October of 2024 a woman died under tragic circumstances in Virginia. ย Her death was preceded by suffering that mercifully we cannot fully imagine.
The government alleges that she died as a result of neglect at Innovative Healthcare Managementโs (IHM) Colonial Heights Rehabilitation and Nursing Center (CHRNC) in Chesterfield County.
The best summary report of her case that I have seen to date is here. The article, available to nurse.org’s >1.5 million monthly readers, discusses key details of the case and broader implications for nurses and elder care. The case has created an online firestorm among nurses.
I will summarize it below. Quotations are from the article.
Summary of events. The circumstances leading to the woman’s death are being investigated by Colonial Heights Police in coordination with Attorney General Miyaresโ Medicaid Fraud Control Unit (investigates elder abuse in Virginia), the Virginia Department of Health and the Chesterfield Commonwealth Attorneyโs office.
On December 18, investigators arrested five individuals and issued warrants for 13 others, all CHRNC staff.
Charges so far include seven counts of felony abuse and neglect of a vulnerable adult, two counts of misdemeanor abuse and neglect of a vulnerable adult, two counts of obstruction, and 27 counts of falsifying patient records.
On December 19, 2024 Noelle Nochisaki, a prosecutor representing the Commonwealth Attorney, alleged in Chesterfield General District Court that a 74-year-old woman with cerebral palsy and diabetes:
- was left in her bed in CHNRC for days in her own urine and feces, not turned or changed, resulting in severe flesh wounds;
- the wounds were so severe that they caused sepsis.
- she was admitted to the hospital, where the infection resulted in her death.
She continued:
โฆ the victim’s foot was broken at some point, and she was given incorrect medicine that โpoisonedโ her, and instead of reporting the incident and having her transported to the hospital, staff just observed her.
The prosecutor then told Judge James OโConnell:
โฆ her wounds from the poor care were so bad that Adult Protective Services originally thought she may have been the victim of a sexual assault. That was not the case, though the flesh wounds to the patientโs genital region were so bad, they were described as necrotic.
Underscoring the seriousness of the allegations, at least two supervisors were initially denied bail.
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