bioya
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« on: June 05, 2008, 03:46:14 PM » |
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I would like to hear the response to the comments made by the state of Texas in regards to this one clilnic. Sadly, this is not a single clinic issue. Lack of training and simply not caring is widespread. Many people think this is just a job, but its not, you have peoples lives in your hands. Too many times the facility administrators, like this FA and staff, just do not care. Mongo asked in a post, why would a company like DaVita have P&P and not follow them? Well, thats a good question. Read the article and see for yourself what kind of things happen at dialysis centers. There needs to be much more oversite by the federal government and state agencies. I have stated for years on this site and others that many good people have left DaVita because they were not permitted to care about their patients outcomes and safety. Its all about money. Something has to be done and it needs done soon. If KT and DaVita would spend the same amount of time on letter writing campaigns in support of more oversight as they do on having patients and staff writes their elected officials for more money for the company, then things would get done. I hope the patients, all of the patients, in both independent and chain centers, stand up and say no more second class care.. Here is an article for you to read.
By JESSICA SAVAGE The Lufkin Daily News Tuesday, June 03, 2008 The state health department will require a Lufkin dialysis center to appoint four staff monitors to its facility before it can be approved for reopening, according to a letter from the state to the facility. RELATED STORIES Copy of state's corrective plan Copy of full 2007 state survey State to require monitors for DaVita before it can reopen Police: DaVita nurse injected 2 with bleach Company's 'town hall meetings' did not solve staffing problems, DaVita patient says DaVita suspects four patient deaths caused by former employee State report: DaVita clinic did not have proper number of trained personnel CompDaVita: Investigation into deaths likely the result of one employee's criminal act Expert: 'Cattle call dialysis' a problem; former DaVita tech says local clinic was 'too impersonal' DaVita: Company saddened by deaths at Lufkin facility EDITORIAL: Agencies respond to plea for updates on investigation into dialysis center EDITORIAL: Company, state need to be more forthcoming with investigation info
In a May 16 letter to a division vice president of DaVita, the Texas Department of State Health Services said a licensing survey conducted May 13 found the facility had potentially serious or life-threatening risks to patients requiring the highest level of corrective action to be carried out for reopening. The letter was released Tuesday in response to an open records request from The Lufkin Daily News two weeks ago. DaVita has 10 days from May 28 to submit a corrective plan of action to the state for it to approve the facility reopening, said state spokeswoman Carrie Williams. The letter from the state recommended two nurses, a physician and dialysis technician, by name, that the Lufkin facility should appoint to monitor its staff. The letter also included a list of consulting groups approved by the state to monitor the facility.DaVita has been working "quite aggressively" with the state since the letter was sent to the facility in mid-May, said company spokesman Michael Chee. The company has retained all four monitors the state required and is now working toward a re-open date with the state, Chee said. The facility has not yet been approved to be open. "As we clearly interpret this letter, the state obviously allows us to reopen at a date that we hope is in the near future," Chee said. "We view this as very positive because if the state had any concerns they obviously would not express their intentions about allowing us to reopen." The center at 700 S. John Redditt Drive voluntarily closed its doors April 28 and contacted officials about a spike in patient deaths and complications, Chee said. The number of patient deaths has not been released by the state, local police or any other investigating department. Lufkin police on Friday arrested a nurse who had worked at the facility and charged her with injecting two patients with bleach the day the center closed. DaVita fired Kimberly Clark Saenz, a 34 year-old licensed vocational nurse from Pollok, April 29, and also suspects she is connected to four patient deaths that month, Chee said. Police have not filed any charges against Saenz in connection with any patient deaths at the facility. DaVita has turned over all its physical evidence to police in order to make that determination, Chee said. Police have said they are continuing to investigate. Saenz was arrested Friday on two counts of aggravated assault for allegedly injecting two patients with bleach. She bonded out of Angelina County Jail Monday night on a reduced bond of $100,000, according to a jailer. Her nursing license has been temporarily suspended by the Texas Board of Nursing, and bond restrictions prohibit her from working with patients and administering medication. Attempts to reach Saenz's attorney for comment Tuesday were unsuccessful. In the state's letter to DaVita, the monitoring physician, among several things, will be required to oversee facility operations and staff qualifications, training and practices, "including ongoing education and verification of competency." That monitoring physician will also conduct a thorough facility mortality review "to evaluate the statistically significant high Standard Mortality Rate," the letter stated. A two-person team of monitoring nurses will be required on site, including one nurse there for five days a week during the first month, to "ensure patient safety." A technician monitor will be required to review the facility's existing water treatment system, dialysate delivery system and machine maintenance practices in addition to other policies, the letter stated. DaVita will pay for the monitors at its facility, Williams said, and none of the monitors has previously worked at the company. An evaluation of the center within that first month will determine if further on-site presence is needed, the letter stated. The facility will be required by the state to file written monthly reports until the completion of the corrective action plan is fulfilled by state standards. The state is also requiring DaVita to send a copy of the survey report conducted in May, when it is made public, to all of its patients. "We don't know what determinations the state is ultimately going to make," Chee said. "We have a mutual interest regardless of the findings in ensuring that when the facility reopens we are all comfortable that the issues have been addressed, patients will be safe, and we can begin providing dialysis care again." The center has had a history of being non-compliant with state standards, according to state surveys obtained by The Lufkin Daily News through open records. A survey conducted in July 2007 at the Lufkin center stated staff had administered treatments to patients against doctors' orders. The surveyor noted she discovered the errors and told the facility administrator. She remained at the facility for the day until patient treatments were corrected, a state spokeswoman said. The surveyor returned a month later and documented that the facility was in compliance with its corrective plan of action. Surveys conducted in 2003 and 2006 showed reuse technicians were not properly reprocessing used dialyzers according to AAMI standards and the company's own reuse policy. A follow-up survey to the 2003 report found the center had not corrected infection control problems. Another follow-up survey conducted a month later found the center was in compliance, a spokeswoman said. A follow-up report to the 2006 survey also found the center had complied. Chee has called those survey reports isolated incidents, saying there is no connection between those reports and the current investigations.
How sad is it that the state has to have four people come and "monitor" a unit to ensure patient safety and ensure that the staff are following policies and procedures. Folks, somehow, someway, something has to be done. I say again, its not just this clinic (the FA and ROD should be fired and banned from dialysis services), and its not just Duh-Vita. There is an attitude that the patient does not count. Its just a job, its just a paycheck. Dialysis is just one of the few "routine" heath care services where a patient can die quickly due to a small error. There needs to be more oversight and more rules for dialysis providers. I would love to see DaVita spend the energy on getting more oversite that they spend of parties, letter writing for more money, and whitewashing negitive issues.
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