
Virginia Nursing Home Administrator embroiled in abuse complaints
Posted on 7/31/2010
More elder abuse scams target vulnerable Virginia citizens
Posted on 7/31/2010
This Memorial Day, Focus on Abuse of Veterans in Nursing Homes
Posted on 5/31/2010
Virginia Beach nursing home with violations will retain govn’t funding
Posted on 4/29/2010
Virginia Beach nursing home may lose Medicare and Medicaid funding
Posted on 3/31/2010
Jury awards senior $7.75 million in nursing home abuse lawsuit
Posted on 2/27/2010
Kickbacks lead to nursing home residents being prescribed drugs
Posted on 1/29/2010
Virginia Beach nurse implicated in nursing home identity theft
Posted on 1/29/2010
Cases of nursing home abuse and neglect may go up over the holiday season
Posted on 11/30/2009
Senators pushing back against DEA narcotics crackdown affecting nursing home residents
Posted on 10/31/2009
Nobody wants to think that a registered sex offender could be living in your Virginia nursing home or assisted living facility. Surely you would know if there were a sex offender nearby, wouldn’t you? Especially if the offender is labeled as violent and is living in the next room? Unfortunately this isn’t always the case, although a new Virginia law aims to better inform long-term care facility residents about such a risk. Whether or not this law adequately protects residents of these facilities is another matter.
The new Virginia law came about after State Senator Ken Stolle of Virginia Beach chaired a commission to find out if sex offenders in Virginia nursing homes were a cause for alarm. Senator Stolle’s commission did not find any disturbing or inappropriate incidents in Virginia, although there are documented cases in other states where registered sex offenders have perpetrated violent acts on fellow residents.
In fact, a Government Accountability Office (GAO) report identified 700 registered sex offenders who are living in long-term care facilities across the United States. Senator Stolle and others became worried when stories emerged about disturbing cases where nursing home residents were raped by registered sex offenders living in the same facility.
Despite not finding any problems in Virginia, a state law was passed that requires long-term care facilities to register so they can receive information on sex offenders living in or near their facility. They must also help their residents access the sex offender registry – but only if a resident requests the information. Facilities are not required to disclose the information unless asked. Critics claim this new law does not go far enough to protect residents who could unknowingly be at the mercy of a known predator.
Advocates for the elderly and the AARP believe that the law should require facilities to notify patients and families if a registered sex offender is living in the facility. It shouldn’t be up to the patient and their family, they argue, to first ask if such a person is living there. Some advocates for the elderly even call for criminal background checks for all nursing home and assisted living patients.
If you believe that you or a loved one has been the victim of nursing home abuse or neglect, then consider a personal injury attorney who will fight for your rights while you and your family recover. The attorneys at Weisberg & Zaleski, P.C. have over 30 years of experience defending men and women in Virginia who have been the victims of abuse and neglect, and pledge to do everything in their power to ensure that you receive the compensation and justice you deserve.
Weisberg & Zaleski, P.C.
112 College Place
Norfolk, VA 23510
Toll Free: (800) 690-0235
Phone: (757) 622-7740
Fax: (757) 533-9223
Ask an AttorneyMichael S. Weisberg, P.C.
112 College Place
Norfolk, VA 23510
Phone: (757) 622-7740
Fax: (757) 533-9223
Toll Free: (800) 690-0235
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