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THREE PATIENTS DIE AT MINNEAPOLIS VETERANS HOME
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Health Department cites neglect or medication
errors.

Story here...
http://www.startribune.com/
462/story/1029701.html
Story below:
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3 die at Vets Home after errors
Three deaths and new rule violations prompted
action; VA may cut $7 million in funding.
By Warren Wolfe, Star Tribune
State inspectors said Tuesday that three men
died at the Minneapolis Veterans Home after neglect or medication errors
last month, and Gov. Tim Pawlenty promptly ordered the Minnesota
Department of Health to begin monitoring day-to-day operations of the
state-owned nursing home.
The governor's action was prompted by the deaths, two years of "not so
good" inspections that found scores of infractions, and the threat by
federal officials on Friday to cut off about $7 million in payments for
the care of veterans at the Minneapolis facility, said Health
Commissioner Dianne Mandernach.
Two of the men who died were in hospice care; one was given penicillin
and the other morphine sulfate when they were allergic to the drugs.
Investigators said they did not determine whether the medication errors
caused the deaths.
The third man was a diabetic who died after five nurses improperly
monitored his plunging blood sugar.
One nurse gave him a medication that lowered his blood sugar further.
None of the men who died was identified in the two investigation reports
by the department's Office of Health Facility Complaints, dated Monday
and given to the Minneapolis home Tuesday morning. The home was cited
for three rules violations in connection with the deaths.
"We're very concerned about the care of the veterans at the home,"
Mandernach said. "The governor ordered this action, and I fully agree."
The action was taken so quickly that many of the top officials of the
Minneapolis home and its governing board had only sketchy details
Tuesday night.
Starting today, Health Department officials will closely monitor care
given at the 418-bed facility. Within two weeks, the home must hire a
long-term care consultant to assume responsibility for operating the
home, as least for a time, Mandernach said.
In addition, Pawlenty will issue an executive order within days to set
up a Veterans Long Term Care Commission to determine how the state's
system of five veterans homes should be administered and operated.
"There are a lot of unanswered questions. We just made these decisions
this afternoon and we're still fine-tuning everything," Mandernach said
Tuesday.
History of problems
Operation of the homes was transferred to a new Minnesota Veterans Homes
Board in 1988 from the state Department of Veterans Affairs after the
state investigated several deaths at the Minneapolis home and inspectors
cited it for 36 violations.
In December, state inspectors cited the home for 34 infractions found
during an annual inspection. The year before, when inspectors found 27
violations, the governing board fired the home's four top administrators
and hired a consultant to help fix the problems.
On Tuesday, Board Chairman Jeff Johnson said, "I welcome the action the
governor has taken. I had hoped we were in a better place, but it looks
like we'll take all the help we can get."
In recent weeks Johnson told legislators that he thought the Minneapolis
home's care deficiencies had been corrected, thanks to strong board
oversight and new administrators.
But on Tuesday afternoon, as Mandernach described the state's
intervention in the home's operations, inspectors met with the
administrators and told them their re-inspection over the past week had
found 10 rule violations, including two new ones, Johnson said.
"This has not been a very good day for us. The other homes are doing
very well, but Minneapolis is still a problem, I guess," Johnson said.
Federal concerns
In two letters Friday to the Minneapolis home's administrator, Bob Wikan,
the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs said it "most likely will take
steps" to end daily payments for the care of veterans -- about 20
percent of the home's revenue. The home has more than half of the 598
nursing home beds in the state system, and the VA pays about $14 million
a year to help with care in all five homes.
The action was threatened because a separate VA inspection in November
found 33 standards for care that were not met or partly met, and federal
officials were dissatisfied when the home did not show evidence of how
it had corrected those deficiencies.
"I'm not aware of the governor's action, so I don't know just what that
will mean," said Steven Kleinglass, director of the federally run
Minneapolis Veterans Medical Center, who wrote the letter to the
state-run Minneapolis Veterans Home.
"We have some concerns, and our concerns are for the care and safety of
veterans," he said.
He said the VA immediately will stop referring veterans to the home.
However, the home stopped taking new residents Dec. 14.
Admissions resumed Jan. 22 for the 77-bed boarding care portion of the
Minneapolis campus, but not for the 341-bed nursing home.
Three deaths
While the state doesn't know if the medication errors killed the two men
who were dying in hospice care, it found that a series of nursing
failures led to the death of a diabetic veteran after episodes of low
blood sugar over more than 30 hours.
At least five nurses failed to adequately monitor the man's worsening
condition and incorrectly implemented the home's procedures for
hypoglycemia, investigators found.
"The facility is responsible for the neglect, as evidenced by systemic
failure to meet the most basic needs of diabetic residents," the
investigators concluded.
Investigators said that during the diabetic man's final three days, the
nurses:
• Did not check the man's blood-sugar level as often as required by the
home's policy.
• Failed to notify his physician when his blood sugar fell below the
80-100 normal range and his condition worsened.
• Did not send him to a hospital when the man experienced severe
hypoglycemia, with blood sugar falling to 44 three days before his
death.
• When he was found comatose and not breathing at 3:30 a.m. Jan. 4, did
not try to resuscitate him as required by his advance directive.
Warren Wolfe • 612-673-7253 •
wolfe@startribune.com
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Larry Scott --