Elder care abuse case a sign of what's to come | PRI.ORG
Support PRI's Global Reporting Fund. Support PRI's Global Reporting Fund.

Elder care abuse case a sign of what's to come

Home | Stories | Health and Medicine | Elder care abuse case a sign of what's to come
email

Email to a friend

 
image
Elder care abuse cases are becoming more common because of the aging population. (Image by Flickr user Borya(cc=sa))

Stephanie Hernandez spent a year in prison after her elderly aunt, who refused medical services, died under her care.


Listen NowListen Now

This story was originally covered by PRI's Here and Now. For more, listen to the audio above.

When 91-year old Maria "Concha" Lopez died in her Madera, California home a few years ago, she weighed just 35 pounds and was covered in bedsores described as so deep that her bones were exposed.

Lopez's 26-year-old grand-niece Stephanie Hernandez was her great Aunt's sole caregiver, and was recently acquitted of murder and elder abuse charges, but not before Hernandez spent over a year in prison and lost custody of her daughter, according to the Los Angeles Times.

Prosecutors in the case alleged Hernandez had neglected her great aunt to the point of criminal negligence. But Hernandez told a court that her great aunt had refused to see doctors, and the defense portrayed her as a loving niece who was able to keep her aunt alive through many health setbacks.

Dr. Brad Stuart, chief medical officer for Sutter Care At Home, a northern California-based in-home hospice services agency, told Here & Now's Deborah Becker that cases like this will become increasingly common because of the aging population.

"First responders and medical examiners haven't seen a lot of cases like this, yet. But this is not going to be an unusual case in a few years," Stuart said.

Hernandez is now free, and fighting to regain custody of her daughter, but the case is reverberating in the elder care community, because experts say it's a sign of what's to come.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------

"Here and Now" is an essential midday news magazine for those who want the latest news and expanded conversation on today's hot-button topics: public affairs, foreign policy, science and technology, the arts and more. More "Here and Now".

Found in:   families & children   health & medicine   healthcare   human rights   Robin Young   Here and Now
email

Email to a friend

 

Subscribe to comments feed Comments (0 posted)

total: | displaying:

Post your comment

    Bold Italic Underline Quote

Please enter the code you see in the image:

Captcha

JOIN PRI COMMUNITIES: