Wednesday, February 26, 2014

New Government Report Shows Crime Against Disabled Increasing

The number of violent crimes committed against people with disabilities is on the rise -- increasing nearly 20% in 2012 over 2011 estimates -- this according to a study released this month by the federal government and reported on by Disability Scoop. The government's data also shows that disabled people living in the community were nearly three times as likely to be the victim of a violent crime as were non-disabled people.

from the www.disabilityscoop.com post:
The U.S. Department of Justice’s Bureau of Justice Statistics said Tuesday that there were 1.3 million nonfatal violent crimes against persons with disabilities in 2012, up from the roughly 1.1 million estimated for 2011.

The findings come from the National Crime Victimization Survey, which is conducted by the U.S. Census Bureau and asks about experiences with crime — whether reported or unreported to police — among those age 12 and older living in the community.

Individuals with disabilities encountered violent crime at nearly three times the rate of those in the general population, the report found. Simple assaults were the most commonly cited crime against this group followed by robbery, aggravated assault and rape or sexual assault.

Those with cognitive disabilities had the highest rate of victimization and about half of violent crime victims with disabilities had multiple conditions, the Bureau of Justice Statistics said.
:: Read the report - Crime Against Persons with Disabilities, 2009–2012 - Statistical Tables
:: Disability Scoop post - Crime Odds Nearly Triple For Those With Disabilities
:: Related article - Survey Finds Disability Abuse Widespread

Thursday, February 20, 2014

More Information Needed on Level of Abuse and Neglect at California Care Homes

Concern is growing among family members and advocates that the safety of those developmentally disabled folks still resident in California's state-run developmental centers is threatened -- not because of conditions at the centers but by the prospect losing the centers' protections when residents are moved into the community.

After years of downsizing and center closures, California's four remaining developmental centers may soon be slated for closure, if recent recommendations of a state appointed task force are anything to go by. The centers' residents would be dispersed throughout the community to smaller privately run care facilities.

Little data is available on patient deaths, incidents of abuse and neglect, or even the success of residents at the many care homes contracted with by the State's Regional Centers to provide care in the community. What is known is that oversight, reporting requirements and even facility safety requirements are much less stringent -- or nonexistent.

If specifics are not available, perhaps inferences can be drawn from comparable state programs.

For example, in the belief that it would better serve children and be less expensive, the State of California has similarly moved to privatize the state's foster family system. Despite that intention to better serve children, with the loss of state oversight, children in fact suffer. Last December the Los Angeles Times reported that, based on their analysis, those living in private agencies’ homes are a third more likely to endure physical, emotional or sexual abuse. And the state system has become more expensive, not less. (See Private foster care system, intended to save children, endangers some, by Garrett Therolf, in L.A. Times, December 18, 2013.)

Relaxation of standards in community care extends to the buildings themselves. Last year NBC News in the Bay Area reported that thousands of California residential care facilities are not required to have certain protections that fire officials say save lives in emergencies. See Safety Measure Not Required in Thousands of Homes for Elderly, Disabled, by Jenna Susko, Julie Putnam and Felipe Escamilla, NBC Bay Area, June 4, 2013 -- or watch the news report below.



If data on the extent and nature of problems is not available, reports of some incidents do make it into the news -- and serve as reminders of the risks to people who need and deserve protection and the failures of the current systems in place. One particularly disturbing case came to light two years ago in the Los Angeles area when a package was left at L.A. County Sheriff's Department headquarters containing 100 hours of footage of men who appeared to be assaulting severely disabled women. Investigators were left looking for leads not only on who was involved but even where the attacks took place.
see:
:: Video shows men sexually assaulting disabled women, in L.A. Times, January 6, 2011
:: Authorities seek identity of men videotaped sexually assaulting disabled women, by Robert Faturechi, in L.A. Times, January 07, 2011
:: L.A. detectives identify two suspects in disabled rape case, by Michael Martinez and Casey Wian, CNN, January 7, 2011
Without improvements to the standards of care, availability of services and reporting requirements at privately run community homes, the developmentally disabled citizens of California are not safe -- and are not better served -- if the option of residence in a state-run center is eliminated.

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Panel Meets Today to Consider Future of SDC

Update (3/12/14): No action taken at February meeting in Sacramento. Read article in Sonoma Index-Tribune - No decisions from SDC meeting.

State Sen. Noreen Evans has called a meeting today in Sacramento of key decision makers to discuss the future of Sonoma Developmental Center. The meeting follows on the heels of a task force's recommendation to dramatically downsize California's four remaining developmental centers.

Among those expected to attend are Diana Dooley, secretary of the state Health and Human Services Agency; 1st District Sonoma County Supervisor Susan Gorin, who represents Sonoma Valley; Santi Rogers, incoming director of the state Department of Developmental Services; Assemblyman Marc Levine, D-San Rafael; and Assemblywoman Mariko Yamada, D-Davis, whose district includes the Eldridge facility.

You can read the full write-up of today's meeting, which was published yesterday by The Press Democrat, here: Future of Sonoma Developmental Center to be decided.

Saturday, February 1, 2014

SDC Families Worried for Center's Future

The Kenwood Press has published an article by PHA President Kathleen Miller. In it Kathleen voices the concerns of Sonoma Developmental Center families and advocates for the continuation of the essential services provided by SDC -- and for the future of its residents.  We've reposted the article here in its entirety. You can also find it online in The Kenwood Press at Developmental Center families are worried.

Sonoma Developmental Center families and friends are worried. We listened to the task force on the future of developmental center hearings. We hear the ongoing diatribe against developmental centers. We hear the call for closure. We hear the need to save the state money. Also, we know our own histories.

We know that there are stories of former Sonoma Developmental Center (SDC) residents who have been successful in alternative placements. We celebrate when they are successful. We love nothing better than to hear about former SDC residents flourishing in alternative placements after being stabilized by SDC services. On the other hand, we also hear stories from those who are not doing well. Many of us have our own such stories, stories of our family members who were ejected from their community placements because they were too ill or too difficult to handle.

Pat Walters is a microbiologist whose work is critical to the lives of many who rely on the accuracy of her work. She has read the regulations for the homes that are proposed for individuals who are medically fragile and she is clearly aware of what those homes have to offer. She is not convinced that her daughter would even survive the transition if she were forced to move from SDC into such a home. Her daughter has a severe seizure disorder and a number of other serious complex medical conditions; she is not easy. Even so, she loves to be in the thick of things and lives to be surrounded by people and activity. She has done well at Sonoma Developmental Center. Walter’s fears are not just doubts, but are based on her knowledge of the risks and her daughter’s unique needs. She knows a move of any kind presents risks to her daughter. Moving to a home where the staff is unfamiliar with her daughter and with medical staff only available once every 60 days is not enough to provide the life sustaining support her daughter needs.

Private vendors are eager to get the SDC’s medically fragile individuals into their homes; they say that alternative private homes can care for these very special need residents. However, when things go wrong in these homes, these residents can end up either dead or in skilled nursing homes, facilities not created to deal with these special patients.

Skilled nursing homes were created for those who are old, ill and dying; they do not have the day programs necessary to provide stimulation and activities needed by SDC residents. Residents of SDC are used to a programmed daily schedule for their development and health maintenance. Skilled nursing facilities may not even represent any cost savings to the state; ironically, they do not even fit into the ideology that includes the thinking that all developmentally disabled individuals belong in community housing living among non-disabled people. Please note that close to 1,000 regional center clients live in skilled nursing facilities.

The situation for behaviorally challenging residents of SDC bodes even worse. During the recent task force deliberations, I was contacted by the sister of a young man we will call “John.” John is a client of a northern California regional center who is developmentally delayed and also has mental illness. He had already been ejected from a number of community homes when his sister contacted me. John reminds me of my own son and many of the current residents of SDC who are among the behaviorally challenging residents that have a dual diagnosis of developmental disability and mental illness.

The regional center was unable to place John in SDC because of a moratorium on placement into any of the state’s developmental centers, including Sonoma. If he had been allowed access to SDC, he could have spent time there getting stabilized, and stayed until he was ready to return to an alternative placement with a chance at success. Instead he was sent to a 15-bed delayed egress facility in Yuba City.

Delayed-egress facilities are not considered locked. They have doors that lock for a time when tried and then unlock. Residents in such facilities who are cognitively unable or too mentally ill to deal with such a delay, experience it as a locked facility. (SDC is considered most restrictive because it has locked doors for a few residents part of the day.) Unfortunately, residents of this delayed-egress facility are there 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.

Recently, John got into an altercation with another resident and so was sent downstairs into a locked psychiatric facility. In that facility he not only was locked in, but he was denied access to people and resources in the outside world, including access to his sister. In that facility, he mixed with those in the general community of the mentally ill and he was subjected to a mix of medical restraints. Subsequent to that, he has been sent to yet another acute psychiatric facility in southern California even further away from his home and support system.

I wish I could tell you his situation is unique, but in 2012, 850 regional center clients went to general acute psychiatric facilities and 221 went to jail. I also wish I could explain that such measures at least save taxpayer dollars. No such luck! The facility in southern California costs half a million dollars a year and that does not include the cost of regional center staff desperately trying to find him any location that will take him in, the cost of transport, and numerous other costs.

The real cost however, is the human cost. John has been repeatedly ripped from his home, his family and all that is familiar right when he needs them the most. He has been subjected to many different medical restraints and no doubt physical restraints. Now when he acts out as a result of his mental illness or as a result of his terror at losing all that is familiar and safe, the response has been more restraints.

Developmental center families are being told not to worry. We are being told that alternative placements can handle our loved ones without problems. They do it every day. But Sonoma families are still very worried.

So, what can we do? We have formed an alliance with the local Sonoma community, a community that has welcomed the Sonoma residents for decades. We support their goals of creating needed open space and watershed on the open space of SDC land and they support our goals of creating services for the most vulnerable of California’s citizens. With them we are hoping to create something new and special for the vulnerable populations that live at SDC. This vision includes support from both the surrounding community and those of us who rely on SDC services. We are hoping to take the recommendations of the task force on the future of the developmental centers and implement them in ways that will not only protect the current residents of SDC but those who will have similar needs in the future.

Sonoma families are worried. However, we have an important resource that other families with family members living in closing developmental centers have not had. We have the Sonoma community.
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