For months, a home health aide neglected two severely ill children, turning off their feeding tubes and skipping their medications while she slept on the job and had sex with a male visitor, according to an investigation by the Minnesota Office of Health Facility Complaints.
The aide, who was not identified, was fired after her actions were captured on videotape, the investigation found.
The case was one of several reports disclosed Tuesday by the state agency, which investigates complaints of poor care at hospitals, nursing homes and home health agencies. It also cited two nursing homes for neglect in the deaths of two patients.
The home health aide was caught after the family became suspicious and installed a video camera in the children's room, said Christina Stevenson, manager of the Divine Healthcare Network, the home health agency where the woman worked. Stevenson said the parents had become alarmed when they noticed that the children were losing weight. One child dropped 23 pounds in seven months, according to the report, which did not reveal the children's ages.
The state investigation did not identify the family. But the report says that the two children were born with a medical condition that requires around-the-clock care, including feeding tubes and ventilators. The home health aide had been hired for the night shift.
Stevenson said the aide, a certified nursing assistant, had passed a background check when she was hired in 2007 the St. Paul agency. Stevenson said the agency fired the woman "immediately" when the allegations came to light last fall, and notified the state. The company was not faulted in the investigation.
Aide admitted problems
The aide admitted in a written statement that she started having problems in June 2008 "and became neglectful of her duties." She admitted falling asleep on the job, and that she falsified the paperwork to cover the gaps when she neglected the children's medications and tube feedings.