This facility should be either closed down, or completely re-organized with qualified senior management in place on site. It is chaotic, smelly, disorganized, neglectful, shocking and disgusting. The whole place looks like it needs a good scrubbing. It is run down and not clean. The people who work there don't seem to care at all. For example, someone might be in great need of attention, but they will stand out in the hallway laughing and socializing rather than pay attention. On the weekend it is worse, and they make quite a bit of noise in the hallways that disturbs the patients sleep. My neighbor complained about all the noise they made at night. The entire staff is very young, and so are the sometimes present RN's who are in charge, which might explain this. They desperately need experienced management in there. When I complained about this, I was asked, "Have you ever been to this kind of facility before?" Well, I had been to a nursing home before, where my Aunt lives in NY, which was clean, nice and well-run. I guess the condition of this place is acceptable to the employees who think that's just how it is. It doesn't HAVE to be this way.
Since this is an acute care facility, it's worrisome about the outcome of some patients. I visited my neighbor in there a few times, and had I not been there to intervene, she may well have died. At the end of a week there, she did contract an acute urinary infection as well as a bed sore. This is directly due to neglect. She wasn't moved enough after having major surgery. She wasn't given water or food properly. They would put her food and water on a tray by the bed, and leave it. The patient has mild dementia, and didn't feel like drinking or eating, so she didn't drink any fluids. When I'd arrive in evenings, her water container was still there from earlier, not touched. No one cared. She got very ill there, and had to be urgently re-hospitalized.
I witnessed a patient in the next bed have her family there. They had hired their own personal caregivers to be with their mother around the clock while in that facility. At first I didn't understand why they'd have to do this. They didn't speak English, so I couldn't ask. During my first visit, I figured out why. This place is the worst place one would ever want to end up in. A real nightmare. A Kaiser nightmare.
The bathroom smelled like urine and was plainly dirty. It was shared by quite a few patients, but was not cleaned regularly.
Kaiser Permanente recommends and sends their post operation patients here. I believe Kaiser should take this place off their list. Picture a dimly lit room--each patient with a tiny flourescent bulb above their bed, no daylight, 4 beds crammed into a room, curtains separating each bed, a tiny tv that may or may not work at each bed. I never could get it to work properly. There isn't even enough room to sit in a chair by the bed to visit, as the beds are too close together, so I always had to either stand, or try to sit on the edge of her bed.The food is awful, as you'd imagine. As cheap as it can be. A patient with dementia, however, might not notice.
My neighbor was treated roughly, and actually thought she had been sexually violated. She was upset about this, but I was never able to get to the facts of what actually happened. She felt violated. They never explained anything to her, but just roughly pushed her into whatever position they needed. I did witness this.
While doing an exam of the patients urinary catheter, one attendant just left her draped half off the bed with her pants off, completely exposed. When I asked where he went, I was told he went on a break!! OK. No respect for the patient here. This isn't good for the patient, nor is it ok. No one cared. The RN on site didn't care, when I was finally able to find her. No one rushed. More laughing in the hallways, ignoring patients needs. So I had to find someone to finish dressing my neighbor who was lying there half naked. God forbid I should ever be in a place like this, or treated with such disrespect. I don't think the staff even see these patients as human; they are just slabs of problems that they reluctantly have to deal with. Acute care? What a JOKE.
A physical therapist came to see my neighbor while in here. I arrived to see him performing his therapy. It consisted of him standing next to her bed, holding the end of a toe between his fingers and moving her foot slightly back and forth. That was it! Then he left. No wonder she ended up with bed sores within a week. The patient was left slumped in the same position, not moved or exercised. This was after hip surgery, and it's critical that the patient move around after that.
If you have a loved one, do not send them to this death house. It's like the lunatics are running the asylum in there. It really is AWFUL. While on occasion one of the staff might actually respond to the patients needs, that employee is the exception.
by Holly
xxx.xxx.224.21
November 02, 2014