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Lawsuit alleges unsafe conditions at West Virginia nursing homes – Public News

Lawsuit alleges unsafe conditions at West Virginia nursing homes – Public News

Counties in rural West Virginia already face shortages of home health services and nursing home workers. They now face charges of alleged wrongdoing by contract workers at state-run nursing homes.

A new lawsuit cites top-down “systemic failure” where officials allowed frontline workers to act in ways that harmed patients.

Michael Folio, legal director for the nonprofit Disability Rights of West Virginia, the group behind the lawsuit, outlined its goals.

“What we’ve identified is even the regulators in West Virginia that are charged with overseeing these facilities are so underfunded, so underfunded, that often we report incidents to them, even though it’s their job to actually disclose those incidents and to take appropriate Action,” Folio explained.

The lawsuit alleges that state employees knew about abuse, harassment and retaliation against co-workers and patients. According to the health care advocacy group KFF, in 20,400 people living in certified nursing home facilities in West Virginia in 2024.

Folio pointed to documented cases of abuse and neglect over the past year at state-run long-term care facilities. One case is now under criminal investigation, where hot water temperatures are said to reach between 134 and 140 degrees.

“What did they do? They ignored him for five months,” Folio claimed. “They put an elderly gentleman who had dementia and he was non-verbal in that water and left him there.”

According to the National Association for Rural Health, health care facilities are still severely understaffed with fewer clinicians per capita and sicker and older patients on average than urban areas.

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