
January 7, 2007
By ALAN JUDD and ANDY MILLER
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on Jan. 7, 2007
First in an occasional series
Alone in the darkness of a state mental hospital, Sarah Crider,
14, lay slowly dying.
She complained of stomach pain at 4:30 p.m. She vomited about
8:30. When the only physician on call at Georgia Regional
Hospital/Atlanta came at 9:20, Sarah had vomited again, but the
doctor did not examine her, medical records suggest. She threw up
around midnight and once more about 2 a.m., this time a bloody
substance that resembled coffee grounds. But hospital workers did
not enter Sarah's room again until 6:15 a.m. By then, it was too late.
A few hours later, two hospital employees drove to Cobb County to
tell Joyce Dobson, Sarah's grandmother. Dobson adored Sarah for
all her complexities: artistic but troubled, challenging but
comic. Now she could think only of two nights earlier, when she
had last visited Sarah and heard another patient's haunting
scream.
I hope nobody killed her, Dobson blurted out.
In fact, what happened to Sarah was beyond anything Dobson could
have imagined.
Sarah was one of at least 115 patients from Georgia's state
psychiatric hospitals who have died under suspicious circumstances
during the past five years, according to an investigation by The
Atlanta Journal-Constitution. The newspaper assembled a list of
questionable deaths by examining state and federal inspection
reports, a database of vital records, autopsies, medical files,
court papers, state insurance claims and other documents.
This study revealed a pattern of neglect, abuse and poor medical
care in the seven state hospitals, as well as a lack of public
accountability for patient deaths. The findings for 2002 through
late 2006 -- from employees beating patients with aluminum pipes
to doctors widely prescribing sedatives just to maintain order --
evoke images from the mid-20th century at the state hospital in
Milledgeville. There, thousands of patients lived and died amid
horrific conditions that became synonymous across the nation with
mistreatment of people with mental illness.
Several experts in psychiatric care concur with the Journal-
Constitution's findings. They include patient advocates, as well
as a Connecticut physician who heads the American Psychiatric
Association's patient safety committee and another psychiatrist
who helps conduct inquiries into deaths at mental hospitals in
Illinois. All say the investigation shows significant problems
with care provided in the Georgia hospitals.
State officials generally do not dispute the newspaper's
conclusions. But a statement released by the Georgia Department of
Human Resources, which operates the hospitals, says 82 of the
patients identified by the Journal-Constitution had underlying
medical problems "that were appropriately treated."
In an additional 24 cases, the agency says, "we agree the hospital
system should make improvements."
Officials say they have been working to improve mental health care
by shifting resources and patients, especially those with
developmental disabilities, to community-based services.
"We have a whole system of care that we have to build and
balance," says B.J. Walker, the state's human resources
commissioner. The Georgia facilities, she says, compare favorably
with those in other states on several key indicators, such as
escapes, deaths of patients restrained by hospital workers, and
medication errors.
"Our hospitals are overcrowded and overused," she says. But "we're
not just throwing our hands up and hollering we can't do anything
about it."
The Journal-Constitution documented 364 deaths of state hospital
patients from January 2002 through mid-December 2006. Two-thirds
apparently died of natural causes.
Among the 115 cases the newspaper determined to be suspicious, the
greatest number of patients -- 36 -- died from choking on food,
vomit or foreign objects, or by aspirating those substances into
their lungs. A similar number died for lack of emergency treatment
or from questionable medical care. Twelve committed suicide. At
least two died under physical restraint by hospital workers.
The newspaper could find no information on 16 of the 115 deaths,
except that state officials classified them as
"unexplained/suspicious."
Experts say relatively simple measures could have prevented many
deaths: More staff members to observe choking-prone patients
during mealtime and to react to emerging medical problems. One-on-
one monitoring of patients who threaten to kill themselves. More
training in nonviolent methods to control unruly patients.
No independent agency routinely investigates or analyzes these
deaths, the Journal-Constitution found. In New York and Illinois,
any death in a state hospital triggers a review by an outside
group. In Georgia, the agency that runs the state hospitals
polices itself.
Dangerous conditions in the hospitals arise from decades of
disregard by public officials, chronic overcrowding and
understaffing, and public indifference, the newspaper found.
In 2000, state legislators created an ombudsman's office to
investigate abuse and neglect -- but never appropriated money for
the office and never filled the job. And the problems have become
even more intractable. Since 2004, the state has cut the
hospitals' budgets by 12 percent. Meanwhile, officials project,
the daily average number of adult mental health patients will have
risen 12 percent by the end of this fiscal year.
This is the combustible atmosphere that Sarah Elizabeth Crider, a
seventh-grader from the suburbs, encountered in the fall of 2005
when she entered Georgia Regional.
The way a girl with no history of serious physical illness died
more than three months later illustrates not just the breakdown of
care in her case, but also a systemic failure that has escaped
scrutiny for decades.
"She was a healthy 14-year-old -- healthy," says Dobson, Sarah's
maternal grandmother and guardian, whose family has hired an
attorney to pursue a claim against the state. "She had never been
sick in her life.
"Why wasn't something done for this child?"
A girl's life unravels
She loved cartoons. Given the choice, she would have eaten ice
cream with every meal. She gardened with her grandmother, but
teased about the results.
Meemaw, Sarah Crider would tell Dobson in the yard, why don't you
just admit it -- everything you touch dies anyway.
Sometimes, though, Sarah's disposition darkened.
One day in February 2003, she claimed to be seeing large spots on
a wall that had no spots. Her family took her to an emergency
room, where a doctor at first suspected meningitis. A spinal tap
ruled out that diagnosis. But Sarah's hallucinations worried the
doctor, who thought she might hurt herself. He sent her to the
nearest state psychiatric hospital: Georgia Regional.
The 38-year-old facility sprawls across 174 acres in south DeKalb
County, near the I-285 interchange with Flat Shoals Road. It
resembles a small college campus, with low-slung buildings
clustered amid grassy fields. Sarah entered a unit for children
and teenagers, segregated from adults with mental illness and
retardation.
She was 11 years old.
Doctors treated her for autism, for which she had been previously
diagnosed. After two weeks, she returned to Dobson's house in
Acworth acting as if nothing had happened and quickly resumed her
regular life: Girl Scouts, youth groups at church, special
education classes at school.
In November 2004, her sixth-grade class from Lost Mountain Middle
School planned to attend a Disney on Ice performance at Philips
Arena in downtown Atlanta. Sarah, by then 13, often had trouble
getting out of bed on school days. But she awoke early the morning
of the field trip, she was so excited. At school, as her
classmates boarded a bus, Sarah went back inside to retrieve her
coat. The bus was on I-75, well on its way downtown, before anyone
noticed Sarah's absence.
Missing the trip devastated Sarah. In a fit of anger, she shredded
an antique book belonging to Dobson. The outburst was a preview of
what would become routine behavior -- "acting up," as family
members describe it.
Sarah lived with her grandmother, as did her younger brother,
Wesley, and her mother, Leslie Dobson. Sarah's parents no longer
lived together, and several relatives had helped care for her.
Now, no one could control her. So on Nov. 19, 2004, her family
reluctantly admitted her to Ridgeview Institute, a private
psychiatric hospital in Smyrna.
There, Sarah received a new diagnosis: schizophrenia.
The brain disorder, which can cause hallucinations and delusions,
among other symptoms, affects about 1 percent of the population,
according to the National Institute of Mental Health. In children,
the institute says, the disease often is misdiagnosed as autism.
Sarah improved at Ridge-view, her family says, becoming less
anxious, less frenzied. But the economics of psychiatric health
care quickly intervened. Her mother's medical insurance policy,
which covered Sarah, paid for not quite a month of inpatient
psychiatric care. So Sarah became one of many mentally ill
Georgians who, facing similar insurance restrictions, or lacking
coverage altogether, have only one real option: a state hospital.
Sarah spent two weeks at Georgia Regional in February and March
2005, shortly after leaving Ridgeview. Back at her grandmother's
house, she continued having severe, disruptive tantrums despite
being heavily medicated. By the fall, Sarah's family realized they
needed help again.
On Oct. 24, 2005, Sarah returned to Georgia Regional.
She was the sole resident of Room 1123 on the adolescent unit. The
only door had a long, narrow window that had been covered. The
only furnishings were a bed and a wooden desk with the drawers
removed. A slim window on the outside wall offered her a view of a
trailer on the hospital grounds.
Over the next three months, Sarah's condition, as well as her
behavior, deteriorated.
She "frequently experienced hallucinations, talked or mumbled to
herself, and was combative and uncooperative with directions and
schoolwork," a state report says. She rarely spoke, according to
another report, and when she did, she seemed fixated on such
topics as getting pregnant and the singer Britney Spears.
Doctors prescribed an assortment of medications: Ativan to reduce
anxiety. Benadryl for sedation. Geodon, Risperdal and Seroquel to
treat schizophrenia and psychosis. Thorazine to control
hallucinations. Cogentin to counteract the Thorazine's side
effects.
Many of the drugs shared a common risk: constipation.
Sarah had entered the hospital with an elevated white blood cell
count, a sign that she was fighting an infection. But medical
records indicate no doctor at Georgia Regional ordered additional
blood tests right away. They concentrated instead on Sarah's
mental illness.
At Christmas, two months later, Sarah left for 13 days to visit
her family. Her homecoming was far from joyful.
She barely spoke to anyone. She frightened her younger cousins
with a fixed stare. Her family couldn't leave her alone, for fear
that she would run away.
"She was sedated," Joyce Dobson says, "like a zombie."
Sarah's demeanor so upset Dobson that she began looking into an
alternative treatment program in Florida. She hoped to send Sarah
there in the spring.
When Sarah returned to Georgia Regional after Christmas, the
hospital staff was supposed to take blood to test for anemia and
infection. Sarah refused, and no one at the hospital ever asked
Dobson for permission to take blood by force. So the tests were
not done.
Most Sundays, Dobson and Sarah's other grandmother, Bobbie Crider,
visited her together. The second weekend in February, they went on
Saturday night instead.
Sarah met them in a waiting room -- the hospital does not allow
visitors on the wards -- dressed in a white hospital gown, rather
than the jeans and shirts she had worn during earlier visits. Her
shoulder-length brown hair needed washing. She had put on weight
during her hospital stay, about 30 pounds, up to 156, possibly a
side effect of her anti-psychotic medications. She was withdrawn
and seemed ill.
"She didn't talk much," Bobbie Crider recalls. "I thought she
couldn't understand us well."
Dobson noticed that Sarah's ears were bright red; usually that
meant she had a fever. Dobson also wondered about a red streak
across Sarah's forehead and about the girl's swollen feet. She
told a member of the medical staff that her granddaughter needed
attention.
Just before she left, Dobson heard a loud, prolonged scream from
behind the locked door to Sarah's unit. A hospital employee
explained that a patient was being restrained.
I just hate to send her back into that kind of environment, Dobson
told Bobbie Crider.
Sarah embraced Dobson one last time before returning to her room.
It was a ritual between grandmother and granddaughter.
Sarah had always called it a "squeezy hug."
Staff under pressure
The next night, Feb. 12, 2006, Sarah Crider was one of 22 patients
in Georgia Regional's adolescent unit. Boys slept on one hall,
girls on the other. A nursing station that connected them served
as a base for the staff working the overnight shift: one nurse and
four technicians.
"There was chaos on the unit," a nurse who went off-duty at 11:30
p.m. would later tell an investigator.
The nurse in charge overnight had responsibilities both on the
adolescent unit and elsewhere in the hospital. He had to
administer medications to patients and fill out paperwork. He had
to respond to emergencies on other units in other buildings and
process the admission of new patients. He had to assign staff
members to cover patients' needs.
The nurse sent two male technicians to the boys' hall; one
supervised a patient who required individual monitoring, while the
other cared for the remaining eight boys. As the shift began, the
nurse assigned another male technician to the girls' hall to work
with a female colleague. She would later say she wasn't able to
look in on all 13 girls on the unit because, with so many
patients, "I wouldn't have time to do anything else."
High patient-to-staff ratios are hardly unusual at the state
hospitals. The occupancy rate in adult mental health units
averaged 109 percent last fiscal year, well above the national
standard of 85 percent. Staff turnover is heavy, made worse by pay
for many technicians of less than $20,000 a year. Nurse and
technician jobs go unfilled for weeks or months at a time.
Consequently, the hospitals often call on employees to perform
heroically under virtual combat conditions.
And when employees are overworked, distracted or disengaged,
patients may suffer.
At East Central Regional Hospital in Augusta in 2002, patient
Larry Mansfield asked a technician to help him buy corn chips from
a vending machine. Like many patients in the state hospitals,
Mansfield, 53, had a history of choking, was restricted to a diet
of ground food, and needed supervision while eating. The
technician got Mansfield the chips anyway, then left to help
subdue another patient. Alone with the chips, Mansfield choked to
death.
By comparison, Sarah Crider's stomachache apparently didn't seem
like much of an emergency, at first, on a hectic Sunday night at
Georgia Regional.
Hours of distress
One physician was on duty for the entire hospital that night: Dr.
Ginari Gibb, a 32-year-old medical resident in psychiatry. Unlike
most other residents, who work at Georgia Regional under an
attending physician through arrangements with medical schools,
Gibb was a free agent, according to state personnel records, hired
for a 12-hour overnight shift at $60 an hour.
After Sarah vomited about
8:30 p.m., the nurse then on the adolescent unit paged the doctor.
Gibb arrived about 9:20, and wrote in Sarah's chart that she was
"found lying in bed in vomitus" and "complained of stomach cramps
over several hours." Medical records don't indicate whether Sarah
was able to describe the extent of her pain. Regardless, Gibb
noted, Sarah appeared to be in no distress.
But Sarah's medical records contain no indication that Gibb
actually examined her. The doctor did not document whether she
listened for bowel sounds with a stethoscope, or checked whether
the abdomen and bowel area were firm, or felt for masses.
Gibb ordered a suppository for Sarah's nausea and a Tylenol for
her headache. Then she went back to work elsewhere in the
hospital.
No one summoned Gibb when Sarah vomited at least two more times
between midnight and 2 a.m. The overnight nurse had been occupied
with other duties since 12:35, then returned at 2 to document that
Sarah was lying in "extra large amounts" of vomit. A technician
would later tell investigators it resembled coffee grounds, a sign
of a medical emergency: She was vomiting partly digested blood.
For the next several hours, though, hospital employees showed no
urgency in their assessments of Sarah's condition.
3:15 a.m.: Sarah was "in bed and awake."
4:15 a.m.: Sarah's breathing was "even and unlabored."
5:30 a.m.: "No complications noted."
In fact, the employees had no idea how she was doing.
As the male technician working the girls' hall later would explain
to state investigators: "We're not supposed to go into the female
rooms at night. We just stand at the door and make sure that
they're in the room."
When he looked in on Sarah, the overhead light was off and she was
facing away from the door, the technician said. She was quiet, he
said, but he "couldn't necessarily tell if she was breathing."
At 6:15, a nurse entered Room 1123 and found Sarah, unconscious,
without a pulse, still lying in vomit. The staff declared a
"code," a hospital term for medical emergency.
A nurse who raced to Sarah's room from another unit noted that her
abdomen was enlarged, rounded and firm to the touch, and that a
thick brown substance was coming out of her mouth. Her skin was so
discolored that staff members who hadn't seen Sarah before assumed
she was black.
Another nurse placed a defibrillator to Sarah's chest, hoping to
restart her heart.
"Where [is] the medical doctor?" the nurse asked, according to
notes later inserted in Sarah's medical chart.
Gibb, still the only physician on duty, arrived at Sarah's room a
few minutes later, records show. She stood in the doorway, other
hospital workers would later report, and watched as they tried to
resuscitate Sarah.
In the medical chart, though, Gibb would note that Sarah was
"cold, blue and without a pulse" when she arrived. "Rigor mortis
had already set in."
Gibb added, "The patient was unable to be revived, and expired."
An avoidable death
Joyce Dobson at first assumed another patient had assaulted her
granddaughter. But she says Georgia Regional employees assured her
that Sarah died peacefully, in her sleep.
Sarah's autopsy provided a far more horrific account.
The medical examiner found Sarah had developed a severe intestinal
blockage that caused her colon to stretch almost to the point of
bursting. Her lungs had filled with vomit. And she had developed
bacterial sepsis, an infection of the bloodstream.
The day after Sarah died, the state opened two investigations --
both by the Department of Human Resources, the same agency that
runs the hospitals.
One inquiry began in response to an anonymous complaint about
Sarah's treatment. The other resulted from a 2005 policy requiring
agency employees to look into the death of every state hospital
patient.
In many instances, employees of the hospital where a death has
occurred investigate their colleagues' actions -- and, records
show, rarely find fault.
In one case, hospital officials assigned a death investigation to
a music therapist on their staff. At another hospital, a patient
advocate with no professional license in any medical field
conducted numerous inquiries. His report from a 2005 investigation
was typical: 58-year-old Henry Jenkins "was loved and admired by
all who knew him," the advocate concluded. "Someone said to me,
'Everyone liked Henry.' We can all hope to be remembered in that way."
Physicians and other medical professionals often critique the
handling of death cases by conducting peer review. But the state
refuses to release records of those reviews, even to the families
of deceased patients.
Gwen Skinner, who heads the mental health division of the
Department of Human Resources, describes the investigations as
"strong, thorough." Walker, the human resources commissioner, says
the department "takes whatever action is required."
In Sarah's case, investigators from the department's regulatory
section struck a critical tone.
They found she had become lethally constipated partly because of
her medications, some of which were known to cause severe
constipation in many patients. The problem, they discovered, was
exacerbated by dosages that sometimes exceeded the amounts
prescribed. They also documented that hospital employees did not
record Sarah's consumption of food and liquids or her bowel
movements.
Furthermore, investigators said, Sarah's impacted bowels developed
over time and could have been detected by more careful
observation.
Georgia Regional "failed to adequately monitor and assess the
patient," the investigators wrote. "Medical professionals are left
with the responsibility to develop systems to collect information
related to the patient's wellness, to recognize symptoms related
to impaired health, and to obtain and provide prompt and
appropriate treatment."
Sarah's condition should have been recognized as a medical
emergency requiring immediate surgery, says Dr. Kris Sperry,
Georgia's chief medical examiner. "People should not die of
obstructed intestines."
Skinner agrees that Sarah's death was avoidable.
"Our take on it was the situation with the child was not something
that occurred on one night or one shift," Skinner says. "I would
say that anytime you have a child die, the system has failed."
The state fired Dr. Ramesh Amin, Sarah's primary psychiatrist for
much of her hospitalization, citing "negligence and inefficiency."
Amin, who has contested his firing, declined to comment for this
article. His attorney, Sandra Michaels, says Amin should not be
"singled out" for blame. "It was a tragedy that had nothing to do
with his abilities as a doctor."
For other hospital employees, the consequences of Sarah's death
appear to have been minimal.
Ginari Gibb, the doctor on duty the night Sarah died, continues to
practice at Georgia Regional. Gibb, who did not respond to
requests for an interview, received no punishment from hospital
officials, just a letter from the facility's clinical director
outlining her mistakes.
The letter's purpose, the clinical director wrote, was for
"coaching and counseling."
The final indignity
Sarah's funeral was Thursday, Feb. 16. Her special education
classmates brought red heart-shaped balloons to a Marietta
cemetery on a warm winter afternoon. One child read aloud, "Sarah,
you're my best friend, and I'm going to miss you."
About a month later, Joyce Dobson called Georgia Regional to ask
for Sarah's clothes.
"They said, well, if they could find them," she recalls. She
eventually received Sarah's gown and robe, both stained by what
appeared to be vomit or blood.
Dobson was furious. Sarah was meticulous about her clothes,
sometimes changing three or four times a day. Dobson knew her
granddaughter never would have chosen to stay in soiled clothing.
She saw this as one last indignity, one last symbol of neglect
surrounding Sarah's death.
"I was angry because I felt like it could have been prevented,"
Dobson says. "It just seemed like such carelessness."
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