Sunday, September 25, 2022

so true: from my house manager

Well sd Meghan:everyone needs read this. The ones truly have a huge heart so true. Need many prayers little guy 

Man what can I say, my job comes with good days and bad...and my bad days usually don't have anything to do with myself. 
When the people I care for are sick or hurting, it makes my days not so great. I wish there was something I could do to make this carefree fun loving smiley guy get back to his usual self! I'm asking for tons of prayers! 
I pray that the doctors find a way to help because his life is too precious to all of us! 

Days like today are just difficult, emotionally. This lifestyle, my job, (MY LIFE) is not an easy job! But I didn't choose it because I thought it would be easy. I wanted to help people, be there for people, be their family when their own family couldn't be there all the time! I've been at my job for 10 years and when I think back, I can't imagine what I would be doing. My life.revolves around my job and that's okay! Because I have more than one family! These individuals ARE my family, my life, my friends and loved ones all in one! When they are hurting, I hurt. When they are sick, I would do anything to take that away!
 I may not have gone to College and pursued my dream of being a Teacher but in the end, I am just that and more! I always have thought when life.gets rough I should have gone to college and made it through, but I'm kind of glad I didn't...because I would have never found this amazing place If I had gone on with my plans. Instead I have found something that I love and I can't imagine my life without it! Honestly, this "job", saved my life! Like all kids I had some not so great choices and I feel like when I got this job my life turned around, I finally found a purpose!! 
It's days like today, that really put things in perspective for me. My job is not 9-5 it's 24/7 and when I can't be with my own kids, they know that it's because I have to take care of some great people that need me a little bit more at that moment! I'm done rambling! 
Just please say prayers for our friend that puts endless smiles on our faces and joy in our hearts and is always wanting tons of kisses! We will be so glad when he is better ❤️❤️🙏🙏

political rules

Lol: I think us goin crazy! I often wonder how much crack these politicians are on. Lol . Us middle class, poor folk, elderly,disabled could never afford this. Seems as years go by we are less n less considered about able to afford such things. We aren't rich like these political that most are greedy, make lot over we do, how crooked most of them are n abuse income. Like social security. Both couples work both pay into it. Oh but can only collect one. What hey!! To me if both work regardless work or not should b able get spouse social security and ours. I mean we both pay into it. So where does the income go that so many earned and can only collect one. I'm sorry to vent but I sincerely feel we are heading for to be communist country sad to say. My dad said my whole life was coming. Have wear seat belts, can't smoke cars if kids, can't do this can't do that. What happen to America freedom. Got wear mask instead let our system get immune to new virus out. Now can't work 7 days row. Have have 24 in between according to state. That bull as long as rested and these res n consumers need cared for. We run 24/7 not a factory where can walk away. State need to reamend this for healthcare. Sad country to me when fourth July comes I don't want to celebrate cuz to me not becoming a free country much anymore. When decide us Americans don't have mask if want, can work when want without rules, can  Not wear seatbelts if don't want. I mean come on folks look at all rules political come out with. Yup in my mind becoming communist . Bull when American politicians want to control all we do. Also not only that are u all aware social security number just like a track device. I gaurentee u gov can c everything we do from cell to computers to cameras. I feel they know all about us. How free is that. Now trying force electric exp cars on everyone. I say we all need to make a stand n fight for our rights and freedom to do as we want n c fit. To me get rid of damn mask!!! I know so many protected real well during bad COVID healthcare n still got COVID I feel it's the immune system. What get cancer don't wear mask. Get hiv don't wear mask i say time to be a human n not a robot n gov. Keep ruling every aspect in our life. God bless our country n c how greedy politicians are n how much try control us. I promise u Jesus is getting ready to reign the world. I hope u all read this. Makes me angry all their dang rules. I am gonna write pritzker n tell him bull that 7 day rule of health care. Rediculous I wonder what do they in a NH or a handicap in a group home or institution and oh no help cause can't work 7 days. Ummm look at that one by St Louis. So much abuse and neglect cuz supposed no help. Ummmm well healthcare is short. Healthcare not machines. We have work 24/7. Not a position can just walk away from. I hope pritzger n politicians c this . Feel free to post please . We all need to fight n stand for our rights of freedom. Ty much . Just had vent n put my two piece in. I also feel those ignore neglect in allow abuse and dont do protocols when. One turns in should b punished. Pretty sad when turn one in n threaten be terminated but let it go on n adm not punished or cna. Sad situation in healthcare. Some of us truly care n heart of gold. Or one not nice to them n then tell us to all treat them like we wanna be treated but then do opposite n suppose b good example. Healthcare is not what was back my day. Pritzger needs get rid of the damn 7 day law 24 he in between. I can c 8 not 24!!!! These are people for goodness sake. Help m fight for rights ty for take time to read 
I found this on NewsBreak: Charging cars at home at night is not the way to go, Stanford study finds 

Wednesday, September 14, 2022

control by state. ewe

Well I tell u to me just another control.  Found out now state say have have a 24 hr in between to care for healthcare ones . I told my supervisor that dumb to me another control. She sd start Jan not allowed work over 6 days a week. I disagree with state. Healthcare has no help now!!! Who suppose care for residents if noone helps out. I think this country nuts anymore. Can't do this, can't do that. Sad. It should.  Up to us if wanna help out. These are people not stupid machines. I could see it if one just too exhausted but if like me upbeat at 65 and can go go go should b our decision not the state or country. They gonna tell vets if in war they can't protect our country 7 days a week. I highly doubt it. To just stupid all I have to say for today. 

Monday, September 12, 2022

crooked judges and healthcare

Yup I tell u I knew was crooked. My son had this judge and state att n guess what he protected him an his brother in his house n my son one who got punished. Seems anyone gets these high up jobs all about money n be crooked. Just like palm terrace I turn in neglect. Got threaten after 3 days I b terminated. Then I heard thru grapevine she laughs about it the admistrater. I see nothing funny about neglect or abuse. Oh yea still has her job n the healthcare employee.  Oh but it was being taken care of!! Healthcare is one big sad joke. All about money n your favs or family. Get by with anything. This a sad world. I did what I was suppose to. My son protected him n his brother oh n the guy who was found innocent went out and attacked more people. Mom rich so he got out of it. We soso n had pay out ass to help my son. This world nuts n screwed up!! I keep praying for Jesus end this cruel crooked world soon. Sad part is some us try protect res n help. But when do as in my case threaten to be terminated. So 😭 emploees some too scared speak up like my case told the one turned in I did. Wasn't suppose tell him. Was to suspend til unfounded. Nope. Was  suppose to check into it the allegation. Nope. But threaten terminate me for protect a resident of neglect. BULL!!!  Which I did the right protocols. Well I quit!! sad to say. But God will prevail all way around. Bible say do not hate or take revenge. He has a plan and he will take revenge. All these crooked asses don't care n do dirty for us citizens and health care will pay eventually. We all need get on hands n knees and pray to our Good Lord to intervene to help get all these crooks and healthcare back where suppose to be. Sad sad sad. Ty listen my venting. U all need to read this. All comments welcome. Yup on a vent rampage. Look this up. Oh yea my son had same judge n pretty sure state att . Might b wrong there but yes he got railroaded big time 
I found this on NewsBreak: Coles County – Court Proceeding Shrouded In Impropriety Says Illinois Appellate Court 

Wednesday, September 7, 2022

abuse,neglect

Soo sad. Yet at certain places do right thing the one that cares gets threatened. Which was me in a facility by the administrator. Sooo sad.  And they wonder why stuff like this goes on. Very sad. They all should go prison for this. My thinking. Everyone serious needs to step in and do the right thing. Some won't do right thing cause like my case afraid of be terminated. Just sad. I loved our administration and don at Mason. Now they coporate. Let m aware they are trying fix situation I went through. 
I found this on NewsBreak: Illinois Governor Calls for Changes After “Awful” Reports of Abuse at Developmental Center 
Illinois

Illinois Governor Calls for Changes After “Awful” Reports of Abuse at Developmental Center
By by Beth Hundsdorfer, Capitol News Illinois, and Molly Parker and Brenden Moore, Lee Enterprises Midwest, 1 day ago

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This article was produced for ProPublica’s Local Reporting Network in partnership with Lee Enterprises , along with Capitol News Illinois . Sign up for Dispatches to get stories like this one as soon as they are published.

Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker called patient abuses at the Choate Mental Health and Developmental Center in rural Anna “awful” and “deeply concerning,” and he said the future of the facility depends on correcting poor conditions.

Pritzker’s comments at a news conference on Tuesday came on the heels of articles published Friday by Capitol News Illinois, Lee Enterprises and ProPublica outlining a history of egregious patient abuses and other employee misconduct at Choate.

At least 26 employees over the past decade have been arrested on felony charges in relation to their work at the facility, and internal investigations have cited dozens of other employees for neglecting, exploiting or humiliating residents, lying to investigators, or failing to report allegations of mistreatment in a timely manner. In some cases, investigations have languished for years as accused employees have continued to receive their full pay while on administrative leave.

At least one advocacy organization called for the state to close Choate in the wake of the reports. Amie Lulinski, executive director of The Arc of Illinois, an advocacy organization for people with developmental disabilities, said the details of abuse and neglect are “appalling” and called on the state to move residents out of the facility and into smaller community-based living arrangements such as group homes.

Pritzker said the state isn’t currently planning to close Choate, but he didn’t rule it out if safety issues aren’t addressed.

“The question is, can we prevent that in the future? And if not, then obviously that’s not a facility that should remain open,” the governor said in response to a reporter’s questions at an unrelated event in downstate Decatur.

Meanwhile, he said, the “state has an obligation to the people that it serves at that facility right now” and is concentrating on upgrades to the facility and ensuring that appropriate services and personnel are in place. In a statement to reporters last week, Marisa Kollias, a spokesperson for the Illinois Department of Human Services, which runs Choate, said that the problems there are the result of “longstanding, entrenched issues” and that the department has taken “aggressive measures” to address them.

Choate Mental Health and Developmental Center. At least one advocacy organization called for the state to close the facility. (Whitney Curtis for ProPublica)
The push to close facilities like Choate is controversial, and some residents’ parents are advocating for less severe measures to address safety concerns.

In 2017, a Choate employee was arrested on a felony battery charge and later pleaded guilty to misdemeanor battery for punching Rita Burke’s son in the abdomen, breaking two of his ribs. But Burke, who is the president of Friends of Choate, an organization that represents parents, guardians and other supporters, said the fact that the employee was swiftly removed from patient care and prosecuted is a sign that the facility takes cases of abuse seriously.

After researching their options nationwide, Burke said, she and her husband relocated from Georgia to Illinois over 30 years ago to place their son at Choate. At the time, Georgia offered extremely limited support for adults with disabilities, she said. She feels that her son, who is intellectually disabled and has a severe behavior disorder, is better off at Choate than he would be in a privately operated small group home. Abuses, she said, unfortunately happen at facilities of all sizes across the country.

“Our belief is our facility is working to make it safe and to get rid of people who are a danger to our individuals,” she said. “We couldn’t be more in sync with them on that score.”

State Sen. Jil Tracy, R-Quincy, agrees that the facility shouldn’t be closed. Her 55-year-old brother lives at Choate. He has profound autism and diabetes that requires constant monitoring. If left unchecked, his blood sugar levels could cause him to have behavioral outbursts, get sick or even die.

Tracy’s brother has tried living in group homes, but his health problems coupled with his autism have made those places a bad fit. At Choate, he gets the close monitoring that he needs and Tracy’s 94-year-old mother, who is his legal guardian, can visit often, Tracy said.

“Yes, there have been horrible instances there, but Choate provides a niche in care,” Tracy said. “Changes do need to be made because these facilities are absolutely necessary, but we need to make them as safe as possible and as nice as possible.”

Choate, a 270-bed facility on the outskirts of Anna, about 120 miles southeast of St. Louis, serves people from across Illinois with intellectual and developmental disabilities, mental illnesses or a combination of disorders. Patients can enter voluntarily or be placed there by a guardian, or a judge may order them to Choate for treatment after finding they’re at risk of harming themselves or others. Choate also houses Illinois’ only forensic unit for people with developmental disabilities found unfit to stand trial or not guilty by reason of insanity in criminal proceedings.

The IDHS Office of the Inspector General, which investigates employee misconduct, looked into 1,500 allegations at Choate over a 10 year period ending in 2021. That’s more than at any other facility in the state. Of those, 800 involved physical abuse, 600 involved mental abuse and 100 involved sexual abuse. The inspector general substantiated the allegations in about 5% of the claims, in line with other facilities. But the number of allegations per year has increased, and Choate has faced repeated criticism from the inspector general, the local prosecutor and state police for employees interfering or attempting to derail investigations into wrongdoing.

State Sen. Terri Bryant, R-Murphysboro, whose district includes Choate, blamed some of the issues at the facility on broader failures of the state of Illinois. It can take months for job applicants to navigate the state’s bureaucratic hiring process, and by the time an offer is made, “sometimes what you’re left with is the folks that couldn’t get a job anywhere else,” she said.

The OIG is woefully understaffed, she added, resulting in dozens of employees accused of abuse or neglect unable to work their regular duties for months or years until investigations into their actions are closed and they’re either fired or cleared to return to patient care.

“The (OIG) does not have enough investigators,” she said. “It’s inexcusable.”

In a statement, the OIG said it intends to augment its investigative efforts, specifically looking at the root causes of abuse and neglect at IDHS facilities. The OIG will also identify and address programmatic or systemic concerns needed at a facility.

Even when the OIG has recommended changes at Choate, they have often been slow to happen, if they happen at all. The office recommended that cameras be installed at Choate 21 times over the last six years, internal records show. In response to mounting calls to address safety concerns at Choate, IDHS announced in June that it would install 10 cameras, though later the department clarified they would go outside the facility.

Senior IDHS officials told reporters that they raised the idea of placing them inside in common areas such as hallways and group rooms, but that some parents and guardians rejected the idea, citing privacy concerns.

The news organizations’ reports included emails from the former security chief of Choate seeking to bring troubling conditions to IDHS Secretary Grace Hou’s attention over a year ago. Barry Smoot, who retired in December, asked for a meeting, and Hou initially agreed, but one was never scheduled. Smoot said in a later interview that he felt his concerns were blown off, and that he was troubled by the department’s slow response.

Pritzker said on Tuesday he couldn’t speak to how quickly Hou acted to address concerns at Choate. “I will say that speaking up and speaking out, when you see something that’s wrong, is exactly the right thing to do,” he said. “Making sure that there’s responsive people on the other end, and that again, we have transparency and investigations that take place — that’s the right thing to do, and that’s what we’re going to make sure happens.”

Kollias, the IDHS spokesperson, previously said that the agency determined, “based on information gathered” after the secretary’s initial response to Smoot, “that it was inadvisable for IDHS management staff to communicate with him any further.” The department did not provide more details.

Lulinski, the executive director of The Arc of Illinois, said more than a dozen other states no longer operate institutions for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities, opting instead for group homes.

“Only Texas has more of these settings than Illinois. Over 1,600 people remain in institutions and thousands more are on the waiting list for community services,” Lulinski wrote in a statement in response to the stories. “Illinois has an opportunity to do better but it is going to take political will to do so.”

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so true: from my house manager

Well sd Meghan:everyone needs read this. The ones truly have a huge heart so true. Need many prayers little guy  Man what can I say, my job ...