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Pennsylvania nursing home sued over severe COVID-19 outbreak

  • Michael Rubinkam/Associated Press
FILE - This Tuesday, May 12, 2020 file photo shows the Brighton Rehabilitation and Wellness Center in Beaver County, Pa. Brighton, where more than 330 residents have contracted the virus and 73 died, has been sued over allegations that it failed to take basic steps to prevent the spread of the virus. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, File)

 AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, File

FILE - This Tuesday, May 12, 2020 file photo shows the Brighton Rehabilitation and Wellness Center in Beaver County, Pa. Brighton, where more than 330 residents have contracted the virus and 73 died, has been sued over allegations that it failed to take basic steps to prevent the spread of the virus. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, File)

(Beaver) – A large, for-profit Pennsylvania nursing home where dozens of residents died of COVID-19 was sued Wednesday over allegations that it failed to take basic steps to prevent the spread of the coronavirus.

Brighton Rehabilitation and Wellness Center in Beaver County, near the Ohio border, was among the hardest-hit nursing homes in the state, with more than 330 residents infected and 73 deaths, according to the state Department of Health. It has been underĀ federal and state criminal investigationĀ over its handling of the virus.

The lawsuit, filed on behalf of five current residents and the families of 10 residents who died, alleges that Brightonā€™s operators chronically understaffed the facility, which forced the nursing staff to ā€œcut corners while struggling to care for hundreds of residents during the pandemic.ā€

Brighton didnā€™t have an infection control program, allowing the virus to spread unchecked, the suit said. Citing a state inspection, it said Brighton didnā€™t even keep soap or paper towels at hand-washing sinks.

ā€œWhat happened at Brighton was nothing short of a tragedy,ā€ said the plaintiffsā€™ attorney, Bob Daley. ā€œBrighton as an entity systematically failed its residents.ā€

Among the suit’s dozens of allegations: Brighton failed to separate infected residents from those who had tested negative, allowed staffers who had contracted the virus to continue to work while infected, and provided inaccurate information about the outbreak to family members and health officials.

Brighton said in a statement released by its public relations firm that it has ā€œworked to closely follow the guidance of governmental health officials,ā€ asserting that it has gone months without a new case of COVID-19.

ā€œRight now, the facilityā€™s sole focus remains on ensuring the health and well-being of all residents and staff,ā€ the statement said.

Plaintiff Jodi Gill, whose 82-year-old father, Glenn Gill, contracted COVID-19 at Brighton, said her fatherā€™s dementia has become much worse since he contracted the virus several months ago.

ā€œMy attorney said they chose profits over patients, and thatā€™s exactly what they did,ā€ said Gill, adding she is worried the virus will make a resurgence there.

Wednesday’s suit is the second against Brighton. The family of a housekeeper who died of COVID-19 while working at BrightonĀ suedĀ in July.

Beaver County, which ran Brighton as the Friendship Ridge nursing home, sold it in 2014 for $38 million to Comprehensive HealthCare Management Services LLC, which is named as a defendant.

Long-term care facilities in Pennsylvania and nationwide were hit especially hard by COVID-19 in the early days of the pandemic. Across the state, about 25,000 residents of more than 1,000 nursing and personal care homes have contracted the virus to date, and 5,666 have died, accounting for two-thirds of the statewide toll, according to the Health Department.

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