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Staffing issues have once again contributed to the death of a nursing home resident. This latest incident occurred at an Iowa nursing home. Bethany Life, a care facility in Story City, was cited for failing to provide proper supervision of a resident who needed help with his meals. This citation is not the first violation for Bethany Life.
A male resident choked to death at Bethany Life on March 25. He was known to have trouble swallowing food. This issue was recorded in his care plan and is also the reason he was supposed to have supervision and assistance when he ate.
According to a state report, the incident began in the facility’s dining room when the man was trying to eat a caramel brownie and started choking. Although several staff members allegedly tried to clear his airway by doing the Heimlich maneuver, they were unsuccessful, and the man choked to death.
The disturbing thing about this incident is that the man had only been admitted to the facility just three weeks earlier. In addition to the care plan documenting the man’s known difficulties with swallowing food, the man’s wife said she repeatedly told the facility he needed to be watched while he was eating at all times. She said she had also told them how her husband tended to eat too fast.
Despite the care plan and additional verbal warnings, Bethany Life failed to provide supervision, leading to the man’s choking death.
State inspectors investigating the incident noted repeat violations at the facility, which included:
This latest report of nursing home violations is just another incident amid ongoing concerns about substandard staffing levels in Iowa’s nursing homes. A recent news article reports that as much as 14 percent of the state’s 422 nursing facilities were cited for insufficient staffing in 2023. That figure is more than double the national average. Other states, including Hawaii, Michigan, Montana, New Mexico and Oregon, also recorded high rates of similar citations.
Bethany Life now faces a proposed state fine of $27,750. That amount is triple the normal fine for this violation since it is a repeat offense.
What is most disturbing is that, despite these issues and repeated staffing violations, Bethany Life continues to maintain a four-star rating for staffing from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS).
Additionally, the facility’s nonprofit owner, Bethany Manor, which reported a substantial financial deficit in 2022, filed taxes showing a certified nurse aide and a medication aide among its highest-paid employees. Both of these individuals worked an average of 40 hours per week and were both paid over $100 thousand for the year.
This page has been written, edited, and reviewed by a team of legal writers following our comprehensive editorial guidelines. This page was approved by attorney Jeffery A. Pitman, who has more than 28 years of legal experience and handled thousands of personal injury cases while obtaining millions of dollars in verdicts and settlements in Wisconsin, Illinois, Iowa and New Mexico.
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