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January 24, 2010

Connecticut Bus Safety


Accidents involving Buses have repeatedly made headlines in our State. Most recently, a school bus driven by an operator with a poor driving history was involved in a tragic bus crash which led to the death of a Rocky Hill High School student and injured scores of others. In this particular event, it appears that the lack of mandatory seat belts for Connecticut school bus riders shares blame with the bus operator's error and that of his employer for hiring this individual in the first place without conducting a thorough driving history background check. This occurence is now reverberating through Connecticut's legislature and perhaps will finally enable the necessary political will to adopt laws protecting the vulnerable passengers of such motor carriers. The sheer weight and mass of the bus when combined with highway speeds or rollovers at even city street speeds produces sheer and crush injuries to the muscular skeletal frame of many riders.

Mandatory seat belt requirments would come at a price which most would support and yet another example of how industry will fail to adopt proven and available technology where neither the government nor the civil courts have held them accountable for not providing it as a standard safety feature. It shocks the conscience to imagine that cost benefit studies have been undertaken and held up in private collaborative settings as justification for holding back upon the implementation of this widely accepted technology in passenger car settings. It remains a blemish upon a progressive State such as ours that such legislation has repeatedly been held hostage to political jockeying and never yet made it our of Comittee and onto the floor for a successful vote. Perhaps things would have turned out differently for the Greater Hartford Academy students and this young talented High Schooler who accompanied them on this bus ride.

Given an appropriate case to force the issue, I remain convinced that a single verdict against even one bus manufacturer which has failed to install this readily available equipment and the vendor which distribute these machines may have a resounding impact on the accepted standards of conduct.

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September 19, 2009

Nursing Home Abuse And Neglect- A Growing Problem in Connecticut

September 19, 2009
Posted In: Recent News , Nursing Home Abuse And Neglect , Fractures , Brain Injury , Wrongful Death

By Paul Levin on September 19, 2009 12:18 PM | Permalink
The consequences of Nursing Home abuse and neglect to Connecticut's elderly and most vulnerable residents does not often make headlines in Connecticut's newspapers and television broadcasts. Perhaps some of the reason for this is that when an elderly resident of a Nursing Home or rehabilitation facility falls and fractures their hip or sustains a serious head injury the intial reaction is too often a misplaced sense that "these things happen when one gets old." The same reaction might occur when an elderly person chokes on their food which may actually stem from a diet not sufficiently monitored for reduced mastication function or develops painful bed sores and skin ulcers as a result of an insufficient physcial activity plan and/or inadequate interventions related to periodic position changes while resting in bed. The problem is that these sorts of events while commonplace occurences are not supposed to happen while in the protective custody of a qualified Nursing Home or Rehab facility.

In Connecticut, there are overlapping federal and State regualtions and well accepted standards of care in terms of resident and patient management which require a throrough evaluation and action plan for each resident which addresses all critical functions of daily living. These include regimented fall protection prgrams and prescribed interventions, nutrition and physcial activity management. Medicare regulations require the facilities to adopt and demonstrate compliance with a physical activivty action and rehabilitation plan designed to improve the condition of the elderly residents rather than allow them to warehoused until the point of requiring acute hospitalization or death. I have a particular disdain for facilities which allow their dependent residents to suffer the sometimes terrible consequences of avoidable incidnets. My firm pursues such matters with purpose and vigor and has developed excellent expert resources to bring to bear in the analysis of
whether Nursing Home negligence is a subsantial factor in the serious injury,abuse or event the death of an affected family member.

Presently, my firm is in the final stages of preparation for a wrongful death suit soon to be brought against a local Nursing Home named Marlborough Manner. This case will shortly be filed on behalf of the Estate of George Cooley who suffered a pelvic fracture from a fall which should not have happened last December. George died as a result of complications he suffered following the necessary surgery to stabilize his fracture so that he would be able to walk again once he left the facility which he was temporarily in for rehabilitation purposes. Well, George never left and his family has not forgotten him nor the violation of trust which brought this awful result about. Due to medication management issues affecting his gait and stability, George was temporarily in need of two staff members to assist him with ambulation to assure that he would not fall per the written action plan in effect . In fact, The physical therapy department even suggested a gait belt to be tied to him as a further measure of security. George fell when one indadequately trained nurse's aide attempted to assist him to the toilet by herself! All manner of serious injury and worse may occur in the presence of negligence and it sometimes takes a thorough understanding and review of the medical records to ascertain the truth about what occured to Grandma or Grandpa. My law firm invite all such inquiries.

Categories:
•Recent News,
•Nursing Home Abuse And Neglect,
•Fractures,
•Brain Injury,
•Wrongful Death
Posted by Paul Levin | Permalink | Email This Post

Posted In: Recent News , Nursing Home Abuse And Neglect , Fractures , Brain Injury , Wrongful Death

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