Senate report: Calif. loophole allows revoked nurse assistants to be rehired as caregivers

By Shaya Tayefe Mohajer, AP
Friday, March 19, 2010

Calif. report: Revoked nurse assistants rehired

LOS ANGELES — A state Senate subcommittee plans to hold a hearing next week on findings by an oversight office that show nurse assistants who lost their certification with one state department over misconduct were later approved by another as caregivers for the elderly.

The report “Dangerous Caregivers,” released Friday by the California Senate Office of Oversight and Outcomes, revealed a loophole within the state Health and Human Services Agency.

The findings indicate nurse assistants who lost their certifications over issues such as abuse, negligence or theft in nursing homes can go on to work as caregivers in assisted living facilities.

In a narrow sampling using uncommon names, the report found 20 cases involving nurse assistants whose certifications were revoked by the Department of Public Health then cleared by the Department of Social Services to work as caregivers.

Both departments fall under the purview of the Health and Human Services Agency.

Social Services representatives were on state-mandated furlough Friday and could not be reached for comment.

The loophole results from the lack of a centralized database of workers that the state departments can check in pre-employment screenings, said John Hill, the consultant who prepared the 32-page report.

“A criminal background check is routine, but what they haven’t done is check each other’s administrative actions,” he said.

Hill said the report has spurred Social Services to start checking caregivers’ names with Public Health and other human services departments.

The state’s 197,000 nurse assistants are trained to perform medical-related and caretaking tasks mostly in nursing homes, while some 140,000 caregivers help with the daily living of senior citizens who are generally not ill but need assistance.

Hill noted the loophole is putting some of the state’s most vulnerable residents at risk.

In one case cited in the report, a nurse assistant lost her certification for hitting a blind, developmentally disabled client with a puzzle tray and throwing a softball into another client’s stomach. Three weeks later, Social Services cleared her to work as a caregiver in a small assisted living facility.

In another case, a nurse assistant was decertified for stealing from nursing home residents. Nine months later, Social Services approved her to work as a housekeeper in another home.

“There is no excuse for allowing people with known histories of abuse to work in residential care facilities for the elderly or as caregivers in any other setting,” said Michael Connors, long-term care advocate for California Advocates for Nursing Home Reform.

The loophole has come to state legislators’ attention in the past. In 2006, a Senate bill required Social Services to set up a database of administrative actions by six Health and Human Services departments — Aging, Health Services, Alcohol and Drug Programs, Mental Health, Social Services and the Emergency Medical Services Authority — to cross-check prospective employees.

However, the database, which would cost $500,000, was never set up due to budget restraints, he said.

Hill said he started investigating decertified nurse assistants after hearing reports that they were obtaining caregiver jobs.

The investigation used a narrow sample of workers with uncommon names because more exact identifiers, like Social Security numbers and dates of birth, were not available, he said.

The Senate Subcommittee on Aging and Long-Term Care has scheduled a hearing on the report for March 24.

On the Web:

www3.senate.ca.gov/portal/site/senoversight

Discussion
September 30, 2010: 11:43 am

It is one thing for students in cna programs, or any health care program, to learn the basics about how to treat patients. I think it is only fair to patients that employers everywhere monitor completely who they are bringing on to their staff or allowing to volunteer to help patients at their facilities.

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