Tag Archives: negligence

Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy to Treat Nursing Home Patient Wounds

NURSING HOME NEGLIGENCE LAWYER ON WOUND CARE

Des Peres Hospital opened a new outpatient wound care center Monday that treats patients with chronic or non-healing wounds associated with, among other things, diabetes, pressure ulcers, trauma, peripheral vascular disease, poor circulation, immobility and other conditions.   The center offers two chambers for hyperbaric oxygen therapy to reduce swelling, fight infection and build new blood vessels, ultimately producing healthy tissue.

Pressure ulcers are the most common cause for a lawsuit against nursing homes, if they are due either to a lack of prevention or improper treatment.  The Wound Care Center by Des Peres Hospital is using some of the most advanced wound care technology available and is setting the standard of care higher for treatment of wounds.

In addition to the hyperbaric chambers, the new center has infectious-disease management, physical therapy, occupational therapy, laboratory evaluation, nutritional management, pain management, diabetic education, radiology testing and wound debridement (removal of dead tissue) to address the patient’s total health.  For more information, visit www.stlwoundcare.com.

Pressure ulcers, also known as bed sores, pressure sores, or decubitus ulcers, are wounds caused by unrelieved pressure on the skin. They usually develop over bony prominences, such as the elbow, heel, hip, shoulder, back, and back of the head. Pressure ulcers are serious medical conditions and one of the important measures of the quality of clinical care in nursing homes.

From about 2% to 28% of nursing home residents have pressure ulcers.

The most common system for staging pressure ulcers classifies them based on the depth of soft tissue damage, ranging from the least severe (stage 1) to the most severe (stage 4).

There is persistent redness of skin in stage 1; a loss of partial thickness of skin appearing as an abrasion, blister, or shallow crater in stage 2; a loss of full thickness of skin, presented as a deep crater in stage 3; and a loss of full thickness of skin exposing muscle or bone in stage 4. Clinical practice guidelines for pressure ulcers have been developed and provide specific treatment recommendations for stage 2 or higher pressure ulcers, including proper wound care.

Statistics from the CDC:

  • In 2004, about 159,000 current U.S. nursing home residents (11%) had pressure ulcers. Stage 2 pressure ulcers were the most common.

  • Residents aged 64 years and under were more likely than older residents to have 

  • pressure ulcers.

  • Residents of nursing homes for a year or less were more likely to have pressure ulcers than those with longer stays. 

  • One in five nursing home residents with a recent weight loss had pressure ulcers. 

  • Thirty-five percent of nursing home residents with stage 2 or higher (more severe) pressure ulcers received special wound care services in 2004.

Data from the national nursing home survey, 2004, published in NCHS Data Brief, No. 14, February 2009.

If a hard-to-heal wound is not treated, it may get bigger and deeper over time.  This may significantly increase the patient’s chances of infection, which if severe enough, may require hospitalization. If the tissue damage from infection is extensive, the patient may need surgery or amputation.

If your loved one has received improper care or you are not certain whether a nursing home has acted below the standard of care, contact Michelle Funkenbusch at 314-799-6602 for a free consultation.  As a trial lawyer, Funkenbusch has been involved in many nursing home cases and has witnessed the lack of training of staff, the improper care, the lack of documentation of records, and the abuse that occurs regularly.   A lawyer needs to be properly trained to read nursing home records. Contact Funkenbusch for more details about her extensive experience in this area.

 

© 2012 The Law Offices of Michelle M. Funkenbusch, LLC.  All Rights Reserved. These materials may not be reproduced in any way without the written permission of The Law Offices of Michelle M. Funkenbusch, LLC. This blog is designed to provide general information on the topic provided and is posted with the understanding that the publisher is not engaged in rendering any legal or professional services. Although this post and the blog is prepared by a lawyer, it should not be used as a substitute for legal advice. If legal advice is required, the services of The Law Offices of Michelle M. Funkenbusch should be sought privately.

 

“Phone Blox” Invented by SLU Grad to Help Prevent Bus Accidents

St. Louis Bus Accident Lawyer Discusses Potential New Standard of Care for Bus Companies to Prevent Bus Accidents.

There is a new standard of care developing for bus companies to prevent bus accidents caused by their distracted drivers.  Phone Blox is a product that connects to the ignition or transmission system of a bus.  The driver puts their cell phone in a box that automatically locks when the bus is turned on or put into gear.  As of 2010, there were 7,200 public transit agencies, operating 66,239 buses in the U.S., according to the American Public Transportation Association.  That does not count school buses, taxis, or light rail systems that could also use Phone Blox.

Inventor, SLU grad Ginny Foster delivered prototype boxes of her bus accident safety invention in July 2010 to the Metropolitan Transit Authority of Nashville, Tenn. Later that year, the Nashville MTA won the 2010 American Public Transportation Association GOLD Safety Award for their innovative solution to thwart distracted driving, a problem every public transportation system in the nation is dealing with.  Bus drivers, like every driver in Missouri, are required to use the highest degree of care in operating the bus.  In addition, bus companies are required to use reasonable care in developing safety programs to prevent bus accidents.  As the use of Phone Blox and similar systems become more widespread, there will be a greater degree of responsibility for public transit companies to keep up with the safety innovations or be subject separately to a suit for negligence when bus accidents occur.  This could allow for punitive damages for willfully  ignoring safety features that can save lives.

In addition, it is very possible this same technology is justified for use in tractor-trailers, which are 30,000 ton weapons on the road.  Distracted driving is one of the number one causes of accidents in the United States.  Any safety system that will limit use of cell phones while operating tractor-trailers should be standard in the trucking industry.

If you have been injured in a bus accident, you need a trial lawyer that is going to be “in the know” about how to prove cases of negligence against bus companies, not just the drivers.  The Law Offices of Michelle M. Funkenbusch strives to research daily the law and safety developments that could affect her client’s bus accident cases.

SOURCE:  St. Louis Business Journal by Amir Kurtovic, Reporter