Home
Up
Abuse Awareness
Advisors Scramble
Aging Parents' Needs
A Little Help Helps
Alliance Awards
Alzheimer's Courses
Alzheimer's & Finances
Ambulance Flier
Antibiotics, Death Link
Assisted Living Initiative
Assisted Living Costs Up
Association Names Chair
At-Home Care Option
Avoid Drug Reactiions
Avoid Heat Stroke
Avoid Medical Overload
AZ Watchdog
Be Prepared for Changes
Better Care Coalition
Blacks' Care Disparity
Black Sepsis Deaths
Boomers, Aging Parents
Boomer Caregivers
Boomer Care Needs
Boomer Nursing Shortage
Brain Exercises Help
Brain Exercise Results
Brain Training Tips
Bride Seniors' Party
Broken Promises
Budget Cuts Opposed
Bush Cuts Oxygen
Call for Federal Aid
Camera Catches Abuse
Camera Controversy
Cancer Caregiver Support
Cancer Impact
Care for Aging America
Caregiving Challenges
Caregiving Fatigue
Caregiver Compensation
Caregivers Coping
Caregiver Depression
Caregiver Health
Caregiver Impact
Caregiving Burnout
Caregiving Numbers Grow
Caregiver Handbook
Caregivers' Health
Caregiving Key
Caregiving Grows
Caregiving Month
Caregiving Questions
Caregivers Lack Care
Caregiving Needs
Caregiving Reward
Caregiving Second Job
Caregiving Suggestions
Care Threat from Cuts
Catholic Charities Raps Cuts
Center Activities
Change Life Styles
Childhood Link to Death
Christmas Spirit
Chronic Illness Care
Coping Strategies
Costly Care
Costly Care Elderly Parents
Counseling Helps
Crisis Looms
Dana Reeve Dies
Disaster Plan Need
Daugher Recalls Dad
Disrupting Lives
Doctors, Aging Patients
Dr. Marion Bus Tour
Durable Equipment Need
Early Discharge ?
Eldercare Workforce
Elder Rage
Elderly Self-Neglect
Employee Involvement
Evaluating Nursing Homes
Exercise for Caregivers
Eye Exams Lacking
Get Sleep Help
Family Caregivng Value
Faster Electronic Records
Fewer in Homes
Fewer in Nursing Homes
Fighting Guilt, Sorrow
Financial Sacrifice
Finding LTC Facilities
FL Requires ID
Freddie Mac Helps
Future of Alzheimer's
Generational Abuse
Facilities Honored
Gay Caregiving
Geriatric Care Miinistry
Geriatric Care Standards
GPS Tracking Devices
Grants Announced
Greenhouse Findings
Guided Care
Gridiron Approach
Hairstylist Role
Happier at Home
HealthGrades Report
Health Endangered
Heart-Monitor Benefit
Holidays at Home
Holiday Hugs
Holiday in Hospital
Home Beats Hospital
Home Care Benefits
Housing Decision
Home Thanksgiving
Holiday Checkup on Elderly
Home Care Hazards
Home Care, Hospice Month
Home Care Standards
Hydration Monitoring
Illegal Hormone Claims
Illinois Caregivers
Illinois Cuts
IL Cuts Restored
Impact on Boomers
Incontinence
In-Home Care Helps Mood
In-Home Pharmacy
Innovative Caregiving
IN Seniors Act
Lack of Funds
Health Care Literacy
Illinois Budget Harmful
Illinois Homes Scandal
Improved Care
Independent Living
Indictment in Death
Intervention Helps
Keep Seniors at Home
Lalanne Mind Health
Lemington Home Future?
Little Billy's Story
Little Assistance
Little Protection
Lonliness, Health
LTC Cost Grows
LTC Hospitals Troublesome
LTC Priority in Reform
Long-Term Programs
Long Term Questions
LTC Bacteria
LTC Hospitals' Problems
LTC Tax Breaks?
LTC Use
Mailing Prescription Reminders
Maintain Health
Making Medication Use Guide
Maltruition Risk
Making a Difference
Master's Program
Meal Interaction
Medical Home Program
Medical Visit Companion
Med Record-Keeping
Meds Risk
Memory Loss, Sleep Loss
Men as Caregivers
Mexico Nursing Homes
Misperceptions
Missouri Plan
MO Ombudsman Need
More Blacks Hospitalized
More Leaving Hospitals
Mothers, Daughters
Music Soothes
National Homecare Month
Navigating Caregiving
New Age of Care
New Alzheimer's Site
New Approach
New Care Dimensions
New Caregiving Grant
New Depend Diapers
New Findings
Newsweek Coverage
NY Assisted Living
No Relief
Nursing Home Plan
Nursing Home Challenge
Nursing Home Drug Problems
Nursing Home Patient Strife
Not-for-Profits Best Homes
Nursing Home Infections
Nursing Home Report Card
Nursing Home Mistakes
Nursing Home Love
Nursing Home Report
Nursing Home Stays
Nursing Home System 'Broken'
NY Safety Net
NY Tech Program
Nursing Home Trends
Online Housing Guide
Online Resource
Oxygen Device Cuts
PA Inspections
PA Caregiving Shortages
PA Budget Causes Cuts
PA LTC Boost
PA Medicaid Cuts
Patient Guides for Low-Income
Parents' Benefit Checkup
Nursing Home Standards
Pay as you Go?
Plants Helpful
Patients' Pain
LTC Week Proclaimed
Peace of Mind
Policy Agreement Reached
Preventing Falls
Preventing Pneumonia
Private Equity Role
Promise to Elderly
Protect Home Health Care
Reduce Med Problems
Reducing Abuse
Respite Needs
Restraint Overuse
Rich History
Rising Gas Prices Hurt
Search for Body
Sandwich Caregivers
Sandwich Generation Tips
Save Grandma's Life
Self-Neglect Signs
Senior Living Forecast
Senior Living Outlook
Seniors' Funds Released
Seniors Worry About Care
Sensitive Dementia Care
Shootings Link
Silver Alert Tech
Silver Alert
Social Support Helpful
Solutions Aging Parents
Special Christmas
Standardization Need
State Role
Staying Active
Staying in Homes
Stepchildren Role
Stewart Testifies
Strength Within
Support in Illness
Support Important
Surgery, Cognitive Loss
Surgery Communications
Survivor Care
Suspect Charges
Talking Books
Talking to Parents
Technology LTC Role
The Gift of Time
Therapy Benefit
There is a Bridge
Tips for Holiday Visits
Top Dog
Top Nursing Homes
Training the Doctors
TN Srs. Want Options
Top Hospitals
Uninsured Challenges
Value In-Home Care
Vermont Program
Young Grandmothers
VOA Housing Grant
Widowed Caregivers
Workforce Shortages
Walking Helpful
Talking Urged
Teen Caregiving
Teen Caregivers
Texas Sentence
Toolkits Help Care
Topeka Volunteers
Transcripts Help
True Cost of Caregiving
Uncertain Prognoses
Understand Medical R&D
Use Funds Properlly
VA Caregiving Outreach
Voice Technology Added
Washington State Investigation
Wealth, Assisted Living
When is it Time?
Women as Caregivers
Who Will Care
Woman Survives Fall
Wrapped in Care
7 Caregiving Tips
52 Weeks of Trivia
2007 Caregiving Awards
2008 Top Hospitals
Texas Care Needs
Med Students in Home
7 Caregiving Tips
55-Pllus Women as Caregivers

Copyright (c) 
America's Seniors/
TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com

Contact us at
America's Seniors/ 
TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com

 

 

 

Controversy swirls around use
of cameras to monitor Nursing Home care


 
 

July 28, 2004 - New and proposed state laws authorizing the use of Web or video cameras to monitor the care of residents in nursing homes has kicked up a storm. 

Proponents of the cameras, dubbed "granny cams," say their use in nursing homes could weed out abusive employees and document incidents of substandard care, while nursing-home owners term video surveillance an invasion of privacy that could actually decrease care by making it more difficult to attract and retain good staff. 
 

About a dozen state legislatures have granny-cam legislation under consideration. Earlier this year, New Mexico joined Texas in allowing nursing home residents or their representatives to install monitoring cameras in their rooms. 

Under the laws, a resident must let nursing-home operators know ahead of time of the placement of the camera. If the operator is not notified or if the equipment is not open and obvious in the room, the camera is considered covert surveillance and illegal. 
 

 

Although no law expressly prohibits the use of cameras in nursing homes, there are various practical barriers to their widespread use, including the strong opposition of the nursing-home industry. 

The controversy has its roots not only in the march of technology, but also in the surge of Americans who are entering nursing homes. 

About half of Americans currently 65 or older will be admitted to a nursing home at least once, writes Selket Nicole Cottle in an article in the Elder Law Journal, which is published by the University of Illinois College of Law. 

This tide is only expected to rise as baby boomers approach their golden years. 

At the same time, about 30 percent of the nation's 17,000 nursing homes have been sanctioned for deficiencies that put their residents at risk of harm. About one in 20 nursing home residents suffer from abuse, according to the Florida Agency of Health Care Administration, and this figure appears to understate the problem because many instances of physical and sexual abuse go unreported. 

Use of such cameras is a positive step in reducing the potential for elderly abuse, Cottle, an editor at the journal, concluded. In particular, Web cameras hold the greatest potential for restoring public confidence in nursing homes by giving family members access to "real time" or to recently stored footage. 

Commercial outlets now sell Web-camera systems to the elderly at prices from $629 to $1,584, depending on the specifications of each camera, plus a $20 monthly fee to access the server and $10 a month for a data-only line to upload images. 

"Certainly some families have the financial means to provide this quality of technological protection, however the majority of Americans do not," Cottle wrote. To be effective and properly regulated, granny-cam technology should therefore be mandated for all nursing facilities. 

"Mandating the use of granny cameras in nursing homes will ensure that all nursing home residents are equally protected," she wrote. 

While not trifling, the cost of installing equipment in a nursing home is on par with the cost of updating recreation, housekeeping or food services. And some of the cost would be defrayed by lower liability insurance premiums, according to Cottle. 

What's more, surveillance equipment has advantages for operators by reducing unwarranted or frivolous litigation and minimizing their legal responsibility in cases of resident-on-resident abuse. 

Cameras also could monitor many of the basics of resident care, such as drug administration and diaper changing. By linking the camera feed to the Internet, nursing homes could handle routine assignments more efficiently. 

But because of understandable concerns over privacy, Cottle advocates placing the surveillance systems in the hands of independent companies, which would then monitor the equipment and be responsible for making the data available online. 

"In this way, families can check on their loved ones and nursing homes can check on their residents, and everyone will sleep a little better at night knowing that the independent source is regulating and reviewing the tapes should any problems arise," Cottle wrote. 

"This service, like the cost of the cameras or of the tapes, is an added institutional cost that the nursing home will incur. Nevertheless, it is likely the best option to preserve the integrity of the tapes and ensure that only families and authorized officials gain access to them." 

Cottle's article is titled "Video Surveillance in Nursing Homes."

 

Home
Up
About Us
America's Seniors WebMall
Aging News
California Report
Community/Workplace
Fitness,Health
Grandparents
Health Care Policy
Hispanic Seniors
Medicare News
Contents/Sitemap
Prescription Drugs
Pharma Suits
Restaurant Reviews
Rural Seniors
Safety & Security
Seniors Commentary
Seniors' Entertainment
Seniors Headlines
Seniors Finances
Seniors' Issues
Seniors Relationships
Seniors Rights
Social Security News
The Virtual Family
Travel News
TSN Radio on Web
Veterans' Tribute
White House Cards
Privacy Policy
Consumer Alert
Pull Plug Heat Costs

 

 

 To Contact Us, Click here
Copyright (C) 1999-2010 TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com