Editor's note: This Shark agrees with the rights below, but would reflect on an incident that took place at a nursing home where Alice R. Gore resided. Alice's daughter and an elderly friend complained about Alice's bed sores and the fact that Alice's roommate was eating her lunch tray on top of her bed pan. The manager did the only thing he could; he called the police on Alice's daughter and friend for "creating a disturbance". So much for "residents rights". Lucius Verenus, Schoolmaster, ProbateSharks.com
Nursing Home Residents’ Rights
Congress passed the Nursing Home Reform Act in 1987 following a 1986 study finding that nursing home residents were frequently being abused and neglected. The purpose of the Nursing Home Reform Act is to make certain that all federally-funded nursing homes provide quality care and services aimed at maintaining the physical, mental and social well-being of each resident. This act makes the care of nursing home residents a matter of federal law and ensures that any violation of the standards set forth in the guidelines is considered a federal crime. The act also offers consequences and solutions to problems or violations, requires nursing homes to provide specific services, and establishes a residents’ Bill of Rights.
The Nursing Home Reform Act enacted the following rights for nursing home residents:
- The right to live without the fear of enduring physical restraint
- The right to live in a caring environment free from abuse, mistreatment and neglect
- The right to receive personal care that accommodates physical, medical, emotional and social needs
- The right to privacy
- The right to voice grievances without discrimination or reprisal
- The right to a social contact/interaction with fellow residents and family members
- The right to be treated with dignity
- The right to exercise self-determination
- The right to exercise freedom of speech and communicate freely
- The right to participate in the creation and review of one’s individualized care plan
- The right to be fully informed in advance of any changes to care plan or status of the nursing home
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