Death toll from overheated Florida
nursing home rises to 10
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[September 22, 2017]
(Reuters) - A 10th elderly patient
at a Miami-area nursing home has died after she was exposed to
sweltering heat in the aftermath of Hurricane Irma, police said on
Thursday.
The resident of the Rehabilitation Center at Hollywood Hills died on
Wednesday, police in Hollywood, Florida, said in a statement, without
giving details.
Police have opened a criminal investigation into the deaths at the
center, which city officials have said continued to operate with little
or no air conditioning after power was cut off by Irma, which struck the
state on Sept. 10.
Julie Allison, a lawyer for the nursing home, did not respond to a
request for comment. Calls to the Rehabilitation Center went unanswered.
Florida's Agency for Health Care Administration suspended the center's
license on Wednesday and terminated its participation in Medicaid, the
federal-state healthcare program for the poor, disabled and elderly.
Medical personnel at the home had delayed calling 911 and residents were
not quickly transported to an air-conditioned hospital across the
street, the agency said in a statement.
Patients taken to the hospital had temperatures ranging from 107
Fahrenheit to 109.9 Fahrenheit (41.7 Celsius to 43.3 Celsius), it said.
Average human body temperature is 98.6 Fahrenheit (37 Celsius).
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The Rehabilitation Center at Hollywood Hills is seen in Hollywood,
north of Miami, Florida, U.S., September 13, 2017. REUTERS/Andrew
Innerarity/File Photo
Staff at the center also made many late entries to patients' medical
records that inaccurately depicted what had happened, the agency's
statement said.
One late entry said a patient was resting in bed with even and
unlabored breathing, even though the person had already died, the
statement said.
Last week, the agency ordered the center not to take new admissions
and suspended it from taking part in Medicaid.
Irma was one of the most powerful Atlantic storms on record and
killed at least 84 people in its path across the Caribbean and the
U.S. mainland.
(Reporting by Ian Simpson in Washington; Editing by Daniel Wallis
and Marcy Nicholson)
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