My mother was treated at the ER for flu like symptoms. She has been fully conserved and the hospital was aware of that and her dx of frontotemporal dementia, as she was brought there by her court appointed attorney. Not know how long treatment would take, the attorney left expecting to be called before her release. Instead, my mother was released from the ER with printed information in hand, called her a taxi and sent home alone. Thankfully she arrived safely, however since no one was notified she had been released, she went home to an empty house left to her own devices. Doesn't the hospital have any responsibility when dealing with a dementia patient?
Solution for us was to write the hospital with a letter of our dissatisfaction and they replied with a letter of apology and solutions to this problem. One solution was to properly name the waiting rooms and two to repair the wheel chairs. It is not in our nature to sue someone for a misunderstanding, however, a professional response was in order. We were satisfied in knowing that hopefully we have improved a process for future patients.
This meant nothing to anyone. We had to explain over and over to all parties that she could not sign ANYTHING. Still they tried to get her to sign the release for surgery when my husband went for coffee and I was in the rest room!
After surgery the floor charge nurse refused to give us information on MIL's potassium and creatinine numbers. Told us we didn't have POA! Can you believe it? My husband had to explain to her that his guardianship carried more weight.
You could tell she didn't believe him and she explained back to him what he really needed was MPOA.
We couldn't leave her for a moment as no one understood the meaning of incapacitated or guardianship.
Your loved one's PCP should of had your name and information on file for contacting you. What I would also like to suggest is that make you badge for your loved one with all the important contact information including meds that cause an elergic reaction. This badge should be worn at all times and one should be kept by the entry door to their home or apartment. When it comes to my mother receiving proper care in the hospital, everyone in the hospital including my mother's PCP knows we mean business. When you have a loved one regardless of their age, it is extremely important that you have legal documents stating you are that individual's POA. It is also extremely important that you have a complete list of all meds and times they are to be taking by that person. It is a general rule that a hospital will not allow a patient to provide their own meds during a stay in a hospital. It is also extremely important, if you can do so, to stay with the person 7/24 while that individual is in the hospital. When you are assigned as the POA, you do have the power to say and do what needs to be done for that patient. All the Drs., nurses, and employees don't have the right to say, "We don't have time to give your individual loved one time and care that they need. We have too many other patients who need our attention too." Nope! If you are the POA, you have every right to make sure your loved one receives proper care. Because there are so many elderly people in our world today, most businesses have become very understanding about an employee needing time off to take care of a person in the hospital. If a person doesn't have a car to take them to the hospital on emergency basis either for themself or to go to a loved one, make a phone call and have a taxi pick you up and take you there. It is a general rule that before a person checks into a hospital for medical care, the question is always asked, "Will a person be taking the patient home and staying with them during the recovery period?". Normally a hospital will not release a patient if they don't have a person to take care of them during this time. If the hospital and your loved one's PCP had all the important information to contact you or a member of the family, both of them are at fault for allowing this unfortunate situation to happen. If you covered all your steps in this matter, you do have your rights. Please take my information to heart. I take great concern for all the elderly people in our world. I hope this situation never happens to you or your loved one again. God, please help take care of this person and help guide her through the rest of her life. I speak on your behalf as a professional Care Giver for the elderly. Thank you.
again, that you for your suggestions.
The hospital does have responsibility to care for patient, not just shove them out the door to make room.
Turning a patient out the door like that, comes under the "patient abandonmeent" laws.
UNfortunately, this happens frequently, not only to patients who are mentally compromised, but those who are just darn sick, and the hospital needs a bed.
One client I had, was ambulanced to ER, sent home on her own unbalanced devices, then the hospital, instead of contacting family [they knew them], to bring her back in [hosp. had failed to check med levels properly],
the hosp. sent 2nd ambulance to bring her back into the ER.
There was no need to use 2nd ambulance.
AND, they tried to bill her for it later.
Then, they wanted to make Medicare pay for it, even though it was the hospital's screw ups in several ways.
All I managed to assure, was the patient didn't have to pay that 2nd bill.
The hospital in Centralia, WA is notorious for strange treatment of patients.
IMHO, I wouldn't send a dog to that place--major mess-ups have happened far too often in the last 10+ years, to consider them safe to even put on a bandaid.
--which meant lots of inmates became homeless--street-people.
It has not changed much since.
Facilities play the "hot potato" game, trying to empty beds as fast as possible, and dump any patients who cannot pay or have no discernible insurance. Happens all the time.
Those patients who are confused, either from dementias of some sort, or from illness, are easy targets.
Laws get made to try to prevent it, but it still happens.
Facilities LIE on charting, to cover themselves--from leaving out notes about the actual condition, changing vital signs that indicate a problem, ignoring adverse reactions to medications, mistakes made, etc. .
Not much can be done about that, as far as I know.
Newer charting has removed as much descriptive charting as possible
--only charting vital signs and tests, and assigning scales for pain, awareness, etc.
30 years ago, nurses sometimes got asked to change charting--do-overs--
if the Charge nurse thot the charting reflected badly on the hospital, they'd demand the nurse on one shift re-chart notes to make things look better for the hospital [Kaiser Hospitals]--to the extreme of having a 24-hour/3 shifts all change their notes.
Big Corporations have gotten laws passed to protect themselves from litigation--they do not want to pay restitution or damages--these newer laws protect them, not people.
Our regulatory agencies [EPA, FDA, etc.] have chemical company execs placed onto their governance, which means, those "protection agencies", formed to protect consumers, now are run by the very corporations we need protected from.
It is up to all of us to be the very best advocates we can possibly be, and train our kids to do so, too.
Otherwise, we might as well "go sit on the iceberg & wait for the polar bear to get us"--oh. wait....those are all melting, & polar bears are threatened with extinction...darn--might have to go out and wait for a grizzly bear to get us..!
The hospital has now locked the barn after the horses are out. That is good. But you are wondering about legal action against the mistakes of not hooking up the bed alarm and giving therapy without knowing the nature of the injury. I am not generally in favor of suing over every mistake any business makes. But the total lack of dementia understanding drives me nuts. If a stream of letter of lawyers would get their attention, I'm in favor of it. I don't know if you'd have a case -- a lawyer could tell you that -- but if you do decide to proceed, keep us informed about how it goes.
Besides putting someone in her room, what did the admin and investigator say?