From News Nation:
“2 charged over handling of
virus outbreak at Massachusetts veterans home”
Two former administrators of a
Massachusetts veterans home where nearly 80 people sickened by the coronavirus
died have been charged over their handling of the outbreak, the state attorney
general said Friday. It’s believed to be the first criminal case in the country
brought against nursing home officials for actions during the pandemic,
Attorney General Maura Healey said.
Former Holyoke Soldiers’ Home
Superintendent Bennett Walsh and former Medical Director Dr. David Clinton were
indicted by a grand jury on charges stemming from their decision in March to
combine two dementia units, packing residents who were positive for the
coronavirus into the same space as those with no symptoms, Healey said. The
veterans “risked their lives from the beaches of Normandy, to some the jungles
of Vietnam, and to know that they died under the most horrific circumstances is
truly shocking,” Healey told reporters. A phone message was left Friday with a
lawyer for Walsh. An email was sent to attorneys for Clinton. They could each
face prison time if convicted of causing or permitting serious bodily injury or
neglect of an elder, Healey said. Relatives of veterans who died at the home
said they hope “justice will prevail.” “We now want our state to move forward
and do the right thing to ensure this never happens again to any other
veteran,” the family members said in an statement emailed by the Holyoke
Soldiers’ Home Coalition, a group advocating for improvements.
The charges come three months
after a scathing independent report said “utterly baffling” decisions made by
Walsh and other administrators allowed the virus to spread unchecked. The
“worst decision” was to combine the two locked dementia units, both of which
already housed some residents with the virus, said investigators led by former
federal prosecutor Mark Pearlstein. Healey said Walsh and Clinton were the ones
ultimately responsible for the decision to combine the two units, which she
said led to “tragic and deadly results.” More than 40 veterans were packed into
a single unit that usually had 25 beds, and space was so limited that nine
veterans — some with symptoms and some without — were sleeping in the dining
room, Healey said. “This never should have happened. It never should have
happened from an infection controls standpoint,” Healey said. Since March 1, 76
veterans who contracted the coronavirus at the home have died, officials said.
The first veteran tested positive March 17. Even though he had shown symptoms
for weeks, staff “did nothing to isolate” him until his test came back
positive, allowing him to remain with three roommates, wander the unit and
spend time in a common room, investigators found. When a social worker raised
concerns about combining the two dementia units, the chief nursing officer said
that “it didn’t matter because (the veterans) were all exposed anyway and there
was not enough staff to cover both units,” investigators said. One staffer who
helped move the dementia patients told investigators she felt like she was
“walking (the veterans) to their death.” A nurse said the packed dementia unit
looked “like a battlefield tent where the cots are all next to each other.” As
the virus took hold, leadership shifted from trying to prevent its spread “to
preparing for the deaths of scores of residents,” the report said. On the day
the veterans were moved, more than a dozen additional body bags were sent to
the combined dementia unit, investigators said. The next day, a refrigerated
truck to hold bodies that wouldn’t fit in the home’s morgue arrived, the report
said. Walsh has defended his response, saying state officials initially refused
in March to send National Guard aid even as the home was dealing with dire
staffing shortages. He was placed on administrative leave March 30, and the CEO
of Western Massachusetts Hospital, Val Liptak, took over operations. Walsh was
fired after the release of the report, but a judge invalidated his termination
this week after his lawyer argued that only the board of trustees could hire
and fire the superintendent.
The Massachusetts U.S. attorney’s
office and U.S. Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division are also
investigating whether officials violated residents’ rights by failing to
provide proper medical care. Attorneys general in other states, including
Pennsylvania, have also launched investigations into coronavirus deaths at
nursing homes. And earlier this month, federal agents searched two nursing
homes near Pittsburgh, one of which had the worst outbreak of any nursing home
in Pennsylvania. Justice Department officials wrote the governors of New York,
New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Michigan last month seeking data on whether they
violated federal law by ordering public nursing homes to accept recovering
COVID-19 patients from hospitals. The letters, sent from the head of the civil
rights division, said the department hoped to determine whether the orders “may
have resulted in the deaths of thousands of elderly nursing home residents.” The
Justice Department said it was evaluating whether to initiate investigations
under a federal law known as the Civil Rights of Institutionalized Persons Act,
which protects the rights of people in nursing homes and other facilities. But
the law applies only to nursing homes owned or run by the states.
^ This is a start. We need to go
after every official (elected and non-elected) that failed in their Covid-19
response no matter at what level of Government (Federal, State or Local) or the
Private Sector. We need to especially look at those in Nursing Homes, Hospice,
Assisted Living, Hospitals, Soldiers’ Homes, Group Homes, Homes for the
Disabled, etc. to make sure we bring the people responsible for the needless
deaths of so many men, women and children across the country. While some could
not be avoided the vast majority could have been and should have been. We need
to make examples of these officials so that they know just how awful and
criminal they are and so that others see that not taking their jobs seriously and
protecting human life will bring grave consequences (for them.) ^
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