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See:
Michael Goodwin: Cuomo’s Nursing Home Reversal is Too Little, Too Late For Those Now Dead
CNN: New York City Puts Bodies Into Trucks Lacking Refrigeration, Lies About Numbers of Dead From COVID-19
Betsy Combier, betsy.combier@gmail.com
Editor, ADVOCATZ.com
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Editor, National Public Voice
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Editor, Inside 3020-a Teacher Trials
Editor, ADVOCATZ.com
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After his mother-in-law was infected with the coronavirus, a guitarist for Bruce Springsteen’s E Street Band became determined to make nursing homes accountable.
When the coronavirus outbreak was only manifesting itself in horrifying headlines from Italy and China, Nils Lofgren, the guitarist for Bruce Springsteen’s E Street Band, and his wife, Amy, moved her mother into Brookdale Senior Living, a well-regarded long term care facility in Florham Park, N.J.
Almost immediately,
Patricia J. Landers, Mrs. Lofgren’s mother, began complaining about missing
medications and lapses in supervision. The family began to notice a pattern of
neglect, particularly in treating her dementia. Then, in early April, Mrs.
Landers, 83, was discovered by local police officers walking aimlessly on a
frigid night, three miles away from Brookdale, shivering, bruised and confused.
It was her fourth escape from the facility since she arrived in January.
A week later, Mrs.
Landers was admitted to a hospital in Montclair, where she tested positive for
Covid-19.
Incensed and feeling
betrayed, the Lofgrens began to explore legal options when they ran into a
troubling trend: Lobbyists from nursing homes across the country were pushing
for immunity protection from lawsuits during the coronavirus crisis.
“It’s a pledge they made,
a sacred pledge, to take care of your father, your mother, your grandparents,
and they put it in writing, by the way, and now they don’t want to have any
responsibilities because, why, it’s too hard?” Mr. Lofgren said. The family
accelerated their efforts and filed a lawsuit against Brookdale on Wednesday.
“We’re just horrified
that people’s first reaction is, ‘Well we’re making a lot of money, but now
let’s make sure we’re not liable for what we promised to do, in writing,’” Mr.
Lofgren said. “Don’t forget, they look you in the eye and say your loved one
will be cared for.”
In a
statement, a spokeswoman for Brookdale declined to discuss Mrs. Landers’s case
specifically.
“As a matter of company
policy, Brookdale does not comment on or get ahead of ongoing legal
proceedings,” said Heather Hunter, a public relations manager for the company.
“I will say that we work hard to maintain an open and constructive dialogue
with families about their loved one and the best way that we can work together
to help each resident live their best life in their community.”
Brookdale in Florham Park
has, as of Wednesday, only 10 reported cases of coronavirus at the facility,
according to the New Jersey Department of
Health. No one at the facility has died from the virus. After
her original diagnosis, Ms. Landers is now recovering from Covid-19.
As nursing homes around
the country have been ravaged by the coronavirus pandemic, killing more
than 29,100 residents and staff members as of
Wednesday, facilities have been scrambling to protect themselves from lawsuits.
In April, New Jersey’s governor, Philip D. Murphy, signed a law
that “provides civil and criminal immunity to certain health care professionals
and health care facilities during public health emergency and state of
emergency.” The intent of the law was to protect health care workers coming out
of retirement or shipping in from other states from lawsuits as they dealt with
the unknowns of the virus. The governor’s office said that the law would indeed
cover nursing homes for coronavirus cases, though not in instances of gross
negligence or fraud.
Even in the face of the
New Jersey law, Mr. Lofgren and his family were determined to take action,
knowing that his status in New Jersey as a guitarist for the state’s
pre-eminent hero would call attention to the issue.
“We think that this is
going to be just the tip of the iceberg, and the care provided to the senior
citizens and parents and grandparents over the past weeks has been nothing
short, in the majority of cases, of grossly negligent,” said Andrew Miltenberg,
the lawyer for the Lofgrens. “And the industry as a whole, its response has
been to push for immunity.”
The lawsuit describes the
ordeal as “every child’s worst nightmare” and follows a familiar path of
confusing information and radio silence as nursing homes were quickly overrun
by the virus. The family accuses the facility of negligence, fraud, deceptive
trade practices and a violation of a New Jersey state law that protects the
rights of nursing home residents.
Though New Jersey
recently signed the law protecting health care facilities, Mr. Miltenberg is
confident they still have a case.
For Mr.
Lofgren, the battle extends beyond his family.
“This is not to take the
light off what has been a very demoralizing, tragic story for my mother-in-law
that’s still being written,” Mr. Lofgren said. “Shining a light on this problem
is important.”
Mr. Lofgren, who is also
a member of Neil Young’s band Crazy Horse, said he knew he was fortunate to
even be in a position to have a lawyer who can help them bring a case in New
Jersey, especially when the law surrounding the coronavirus outbreak is
challenging and confusing.
“It’s a nightmare because
99 percent of most people can’t even afford a lawyer,” he said. “And they just
take it, and their families are decimated by it.”
After she left the
hospital, Ms. Landers moved to a different facility, Care One, in Livingston,
N.J. But the family remains shaken.
“It’s unconscionable and
immoral and disgusting,” Mr. Logren said. “It’s like their true colors are
coming out, and I hope we can hold them accountable.”
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