Guest guest Posted February 6, 2004 Report Share Posted February 6, 2004 Ron, I would advise you to report the matter to Adult Protective Services. They will investigate exploitation of the elderly as well as abuse, neglect, etc... The laws are similar to Child Protective Services, and in fact it's the same hotline phone number! The investigator cannot legally leak your name as the reporter, either. 800/252-5400 (state wide intake- SWI) http://www.tdprs.state.tx.us/Adult_Protection/ See Human Resources Code, Subchapter B. Reports of Abuse, Neglect, or Exploitation: Immunities, 48.051 - 48.054 for more information regarding the law statute on reporting. " The law requires any person who believes that an elderly or adult with disabilities is being abused, neglected or exploited to report the circumstance to the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (DFPS) Statewide Intake. A person making a report is immune from civil or criminal liability, and the name of the person making the report is kept confidential. Any person suspecting abuse and not reporting it can be held liable for a Class B misdemeanor. SWI will accept anonymous reports; however, it is beneficial to the victim if the investigating worker is able to obtain as much detailed information as possible. Time frames for investigating reports are based on the severity of the allegations. " -TDPRS web site Regards, Jeff Hummel, RN,BA,EMT-I [deleted for the sake of the e-mail length]- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 6, 2004 Report Share Posted February 6, 2004 Ron, I would advise you to report the matter to Adult Protective Services. They will investigate exploitation of the elderly as well as abuse, neglect, etc... The laws are similar to Child Protective Services, and in fact it's the same hotline phone number! The investigator cannot legally leak your name as the reporter, either. 800/252-5400 (state wide intake- SWI) http://www.tdprs.state.tx.us/Adult_Protection/ See Human Resources Code, Subchapter B. Reports of Abuse, Neglect, or Exploitation: Immunities, 48.051 - 48.054 for more information regarding the law statute on reporting. " The law requires any person who believes that an elderly or adult with disabilities is being abused, neglected or exploited to report the circumstance to the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (DFPS) Statewide Intake. A person making a report is immune from civil or criminal liability, and the name of the person making the report is kept confidential. Any person suspecting abuse and not reporting it can be held liable for a Class B misdemeanor. SWI will accept anonymous reports; however, it is beneficial to the victim if the investigating worker is able to obtain as much detailed information as possible. Time frames for investigating reports are based on the severity of the allegations. " -TDPRS web site Regards, Jeff Hummel, RN,BA,EMT-I [deleted for the sake of the e-mail length]- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 6, 2004 Report Share Posted February 6, 2004 Something else you should be aware of is rather or not the patient is tell you the truth of the events or imagines them to be true. I remember in caring for my own mother as she slipped away in to her on world as the elderly do her telling my mother in law that we never feed her and other fabricated stories which my in laws were with us and knew she was making up stories to get sympathy, I like the one where lighting hit her in her mouth and destroyed her partial denture plate, that one almost killed her she stuck the metal tangs of the plate in a electrical out let for unknown reasons she survived but the dentures did not and the story was told by her to dentist and nurses and doctors until the day she finally passed away in the hospital. I am not saying the lady is lying but beware of stories from the elderly if you have no other support of evidence except the story. Is there an attorney in the house? I'll try to keep it brief and get to the point... I recently encountered a pt in a bad situation- involves assault, family violence, abuse of elderly. LE is seeking grand jury indictment. The patient has called us back to her home several times (shares her home with family) to check BP, etc.- but also for other reasons. During those visits she has given many details, her concerns... My opinion: the only way this freeloading family will continue to spend this lady's money is either they gain power of attorney, or she dies before modifying her will (she intends to). They have already taken her to the Dr seeking a diagnosis of Alzheimer's or dementia. Mechanisms are in motion to rescue this poor lady from this situation, and I believe she'll be OK. I have made phone calls and taken certain actions on her behalf and at her request. I don't know if the family knows the depth of my involvement in the matter. They do know that I am helping her in some way, and they feel this is 'none of my business'. Once this is over, they may seek retribution against me. Most likely they will slash the tires on the ambulance or just shoot me. But if they should happen to know anything about HIPAA- what then? I'm certain that my communication regarding the patient is defensible- such as with LE involved in the case, especially with concerns for her safety. I'm not carelessly spewing out details of the matter all over the place, but what if a thorough investigation of the matter revealed that a HIPAA violation has occurred somewhere? There's the background- here's the questions: The patient will not complain or sue- I'm certain of that. 1. Does a potential HIPAA violation only relate to the patient's medical condition, or could it include other matters discussed with the patient in private during the course of my duty? 2. Could the patient's family sue or complain? 3. If so, could the patient herself intervene against their actions? 4. If the patient dies- how strong is the 'concern for safety' defense? I have no written authorization signed by the patient. If I told her about my HIPAA concerns, she would probably sign a document authorizing me to discuss anything and everything regarding her medical condition or any other aspect of her life with anyone and everyone, including CNN and the National Enquirer. Should I get a written authorization? Ron Mason (5) How do I get myself into these messes ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 6, 2004 Report Share Posted February 6, 2004 Something else you should be aware of is rather or not the patient is tell you the truth of the events or imagines them to be true. I remember in caring for my own mother as she slipped away in to her on world as the elderly do her telling my mother in law that we never feed her and other fabricated stories which my in laws were with us and knew she was making up stories to get sympathy, I like the one where lighting hit her in her mouth and destroyed her partial denture plate, that one almost killed her she stuck the metal tangs of the plate in a electrical out let for unknown reasons she survived but the dentures did not and the story was told by her to dentist and nurses and doctors until the day she finally passed away in the hospital. I am not saying the lady is lying but beware of stories from the elderly if you have no other support of evidence except the story. Is there an attorney in the house? I'll try to keep it brief and get to the point... I recently encountered a pt in a bad situation- involves assault, family violence, abuse of elderly. LE is seeking grand jury indictment. The patient has called us back to her home several times (shares her home with family) to check BP, etc.- but also for other reasons. During those visits she has given many details, her concerns... My opinion: the only way this freeloading family will continue to spend this lady's money is either they gain power of attorney, or she dies before modifying her will (she intends to). They have already taken her to the Dr seeking a diagnosis of Alzheimer's or dementia. Mechanisms are in motion to rescue this poor lady from this situation, and I believe she'll be OK. I have made phone calls and taken certain actions on her behalf and at her request. I don't know if the family knows the depth of my involvement in the matter. They do know that I am helping her in some way, and they feel this is 'none of my business'. Once this is over, they may seek retribution against me. Most likely they will slash the tires on the ambulance or just shoot me. But if they should happen to know anything about HIPAA- what then? I'm certain that my communication regarding the patient is defensible- such as with LE involved in the case, especially with concerns for her safety. I'm not carelessly spewing out details of the matter all over the place, but what if a thorough investigation of the matter revealed that a HIPAA violation has occurred somewhere? There's the background- here's the questions: The patient will not complain or sue- I'm certain of that. 1. Does a potential HIPAA violation only relate to the patient's medical condition, or could it include other matters discussed with the patient in private during the course of my duty? 2. Could the patient's family sue or complain? 3. If so, could the patient herself intervene against their actions? 4. If the patient dies- how strong is the 'concern for safety' defense? I have no written authorization signed by the patient. If I told her about my HIPAA concerns, she would probably sign a document authorizing me to discuss anything and everything regarding her medical condition or any other aspect of her life with anyone and everyone, including CNN and the National Enquirer. Should I get a written authorization? Ron Mason (5) How do I get myself into these messes ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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