At a nursing home in Glendale, a certified nursing assistant was charged with raping a mentally ill patient in her room. After the incident, according to investigators, the victim said she felt scared, sad, wanted to kill herself.
At a facility in Simi Valley, the daughter of one elderly resident told LAist that staff didn t adequately care for her mother, who developed a gruesome bedsore. I could stick my pinky in it, she said. It was down to the bone.
At a nursing home in Compton, a schizophrenic patient with one leg was inappropriately discharged. He went missing, only to turn up two weeks later in a park, unconscious, under his wheelchair. Regulators charged that the facility s lapses presented imminent danger or a substantial probability that if the man hadn t been found, he would have suffered grave harm, even death.
Immediate Jeopardy: Death And Neglect Inside A Troubled California Nursing Home Chain
By Elly Yu and Aaron Mendelson
Published Apr 6, 2021
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At a nursing home in Glendale, a certified nursing assistant was charged with raping a mentally ill patient in her room. After the incident, according to investigators, the victim said she felt scared, sad, wanted to kill herself.
At a facility in Simi Valley, the daughter of one elderly resident told LAist that staff didn t adequately care for her mother, who developed a gruesome bedsore. I could stick my pinky in it, she said. It was down to the bone.
Not much at all at least in the short term.
On Wednesday, the FTC accused Facebook of trying to “entrench and maintain its monopoly and deny consumers the benefits of competition” through its acquisition of Instagram and WhatsApp, and announced an “aim is to roll back Facebook’s anticompetitive conduct and restore competition so that innovation and free competition can thrive” potentially by unwinding those acquisitions.
But making the case for antitrust violation could be tough for a few reasons and may not be the fix advertisers are looking for, nor the silver bullet to Facebook’s privacy problems.
A long shot
Is there even a way to say that 2020 has put us all through the wringer without sounding like a cliché at this point? Probably not. But boy, has it.
From booksellers to restaurants to boutiques, no business in L.A. has made it through this year unscathed. That s why we designed this holiday shop-small guide, to spotlight our favorite local businesses, makers and products. These shops reflect everything that makes this city great, places that have, despite the Amazon explosion, kept L.A. from turning into a wasteland of big box stores and Walmart parking lots. These are items that you might not find anywhere else from vendors who after this tumultuous year could certainly use some love.