Author Topic: Restraint Death at Rainbow Ranch, Florida  (Read 8747 times)

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Offline Ursus

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Mother ... Claims Drug Overdose Led to Death
« Reply #45 on: May 15, 2010, 02:53:10 PM »
Quote from: "DannyB II"
Quote
APD Director Jane Johnson said, "The agency is very pleased to know that these individuals have agreed not to run or be involved in any way with a group home for people with developmental disabilities again."
You are very pleased....hmmmm. Well I'm glad somebody is because it is not that boys parents. He should be in jail (Glatt).

Danny
Well, as you might have guessed, this saga isn't over yet. David Glatt and Rainbow Ranch may be out of the way, but they weren't the only ones responsible for this poor boy's death. While Glatt may have played it fast and loose years ago with his illegally obtained Prozac scripts, even he couldn't have come up with the arsenal of psyche twisters and neurological override that Denis Maltez was subjected to.

Martha Quesada, Denis's mom, filed a wrongful death and medical malpractice lawsuit against both David Glatt and Dr. Steven L. Kaplan, who had been psychiatrist for most of kids at the former Rainbow Ranch group home. Here's the press release put out by the law firm representing her:

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Mother of Florida Autistic Boy Claims Psychiatric Drug Overdose Led to Death
Posted on: Wednesday, 20 May 2009, 15:27 CDT

Lawsuit Blames Doctor's Prescription of Psychotropic Cocktail, Lack of Oversight

MIAMI, May 20 /PRNewswire/ -- The mother of a 12-year-old autistic boy who died while in the care of a psychiatrist at a group home has filed a wrongful death and medical malpractice lawsuit claiming overmedication and improper care led to the boy's death.

The lawsuit was filed in Miami-Dade circuit court Tuesday by the boy's mother, Martha Quesada. In it, she alleges Denis Maltez died in 2007 after receiving an overdose of anti-psychotic drugs.

"This is a clear case of a 12-year-child who perished because he was given a lethal combination of off-label, dangerous, anti-psychotic drugs to control his behavior without appropriate consent, administration and supervision," said Howard Talenfeld, Quesada's attorney and partner with Fort Lauderdale law firm, Colodny, Fass, Talenfeld, Karlinsky & Abate, P.A., in Fort Lauderdale. Partner Maria Abate is co-counsel on the case.

"Tragically, this case is one of many cases where foster children and developmentally disabled children are given powerful drug to control their behavior instead of utilizing appropriate behavioral interventions," Talenfeld said. "This is an important first step in seeking remedy for Ms. Quesada's loss, and raising awareness of the cavalier prescription, administration of medications to control behavior with little regard for possible counter-indications or devastating results."

At the time of his death on May 23, 2007, Denis was under the care of psychiatrist, Dr. Steven L. Kaplan, at the former Rainbow Ranch group home, owned and operated by David Glatt. Both are named in the lawsuit.

The Miami-Dade County Medical Examiner found that Denis died of Central Serotonergic Syndrome. This resulted from "the co-administration of multiple psychotropic medications with no monitoring or supervision," the lawsuit claims. The drugs stimulated overproduction of serotonin - a naturally occurring chemical that help regulate a person's mood. This proved lethal, the suit claims. Denis, who had severe autism, died in a van after being restrained by group home staff.

The lawsuit claims Glatt replaced Denis's regular visits to Jackson Memorial Hospital with on-site care by Dr. Kaplan without Quesada's consent. During Denis's time at the facility, Kaplan only visited him twice. Kaplan prescribed a regimen of medications described "as chemical restraints to control Denis's behavior." Those included Depakote, an anti-seizure drug used for mood-stabilization; the tranquilizer Clonazepam; and anti-psychotics, Seroquel and Zyprexa. Several of the drugs lack Food and Drug Administration approval for use on children. They also warn of possible side-effects.

Quesada's lawsuit comes a month after the death of Gabriel Myers. The 7-year-old foster child had been prescribed a variety of mental health drugs, and later hanged himself. The use of psychiatric medications on Florida foster children now is being studied by the state Department of Children and Families.

Colodny, Fass, Talenfeld, Karlinsky & Abate, P.A. is a full-service law firm specializing in government relations, commercial litigation and administrative law, with offices in Fort Lauderdale and Tallahassee. The Firm's litigation practice group also handles civil rights, employment discrimination and child advocacy matters on both the trial and appellate levels. For more information, visit http://www.cftlaw.com or call (954) 492-4010 or (850) 577-0398 in Tallahassee.

CONTACT: Michelle Friedman of Boardroom Communications http://www.boardroompr.com, 954-370-8999, or email mfriedman@boardroompr.com, for Colodny, Fass, Talenfeld, Karlinsky & Abate, P.A.

SOURCE Colodny, Fass, Talenfeld, Karlinsky & Abate

Source: PR Newswire


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Offline Ursus

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Lawsuit says too many psychiatric drugs killed boy
« Reply #46 on: May 16, 2010, 07:55:12 PM »
... And here's an article from The Miami Herald that was published the same day:

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The Miami Herald
Lawsuit says too many psychiatric drugs killed boy

A disabled boy was lethally overmedicated, a lawsuit contends, as outrage continues over a child's suicide while on several drugs last month.

BY CAROL MARBIN MILLER · cmarbin@miamiherald.com
Wednesday, May 20, 2009


Amid a wide-ranging debate over the proper use of mental health drugs on troubled children, the mother of a disabled boy who died in 2007 is claiming in a lawsuit the boy was overdosed by a cocktail of psychiatric drugs, including two powerful anti-psychotics.

Martha Quesada, the mother of 12-year-old Denis Maltez, filed a wrongful death and medical malpractice lawsuit Monday in Miami-Dade circuit court, claiming Denis' psychiatrist, Dr. Steven L. Kaplan, and the now-shuttered Rainbow Ranch group home overmedicated Denis and failed to properly monitor his condition.

Denis, who was diagnosed with autism, died of serotonin syndrome, according to a 2007 autopsy by the Miami-Dade Medical Examiner's office.

The rare condition, which can be life-threatening, occurs when a combination of drugs -- particularly mental-health drugs -- causes the brain to produce an excess of serotonin, a chemical produced by nerve cells that regulates mood. The condition can cause rigidity and tremors, as well as confusion and high blood pressure, said Dr. Carlos Singer, a professor of neurology at the University of Miami's medical school.

''I miss him so much,'' Quesada, 31, of Hialeah, said of her son, who died a week after Mother's Day. "This month, for me, is hard because of Mother's Day. This Saturday will be two years since he died. The last time I saw him it was Mother's Day.''

''I know I am happy, because I have two other children,'' Quesada said. "But I am also sad, because my other son died. It's hard.''

Denis died May 23, 2007. He had gone by van with others from the group home to get a haircut at a local flea market. In the parking lot, he became aggressive, kicking and biting group home staff. An autopsy report said he became unresponsive shortly after staff restrained him while he lay on his stomach on a bench seat in the van.

Quesada's lawsuit was filed amid a high-profile investigation by the Department of Children & Families into the death last month of Gabriel Myers, a 7-year-old foster child who had been taking a cocktail of mental health drugs. DCF Secretary George Sheldon appointed a task force to study Gabriel's case, and the use of psychiatric drugs on foster kids.

'TOUGH' TO HANDLE

Kaplan did not return calls for comment. In a June 2007 article in The Miami Herald, Kaplan said ''it's possible'' Denis would have been sleepy at school if he had not been given his medications at the right times. But, Kaplan added, "I never saw him dopey or sleepy.''

''He was all over the place, a tough little guy to handle but very likeable,'' the psychiatrist said at the time.

Rainbow Ranch's owner, David Glatt, whose group homes were shut down by the state in June 2007, could not be reached for comment.

Denis, whose autism was severe, was sent by his mother to a state-funded group home in 2003 after he tried to choke his younger sister. Quesada never relinquished her right to raise the boy, but was afraid his violent outbursts were a danger to her two other children.

According to the 28-page lawsuit, Glatt stopped taking Denis to doctors at Jackson Memorial Hospital after he arrived at the group home in May 2006, and substituted Kaplan ''without the consent of [Denis's] mother.'' Kaplan was treating several group home clients, the suit claims.

Kaplan prescribed and refilled four mental health drugs: Seroquel and Zyprexa, both anti-psychotic medications; Depakote, an anti-seizure drug sometimes used to stabilize moods; and Clonazepam, a tranquilizer. The lawsuit says the drugs were used "as chemical restraints to control Denis's behavior.''

Though some of the medications are not approved by the Food and Drug Administration for use on children and carry strong warnings about possible side-effects, Kaplan ''took no steps to ensure that Denis was not suffering any adverse effects from these medications,'' the suit claims.

In fact, the suit claims, Kaplan examined the boy only once between between May 26, 2006 and May 23, 2007, the day Denis died.

There were warning signs that the drugs may have been harming the boy, according to the suit, filed by by Fort Lauderdale attorneys Maria Elena Abate and Howard Talenfeld. In June 2006, teachers at Denis's school, Ruth Owens Kruse Educational Center, reported the boy was sleeping through class.

UP AND DOWN

Acting on concerns from his teachers, Denis was hospitalized twice, first on July 17, 2006, at Miami Children's Hospital for emergency treatment, and, later on Aug. 4, 2006, at Baptist Hospital's emergency room. Doctors at Baptist recommended that the dosage of one of the drugs, Depakote, be reduced, the suit claims.

The lawsuit says the dosage was, indeed, reduced, but then increased again about six months later. That winter, the suit claims, the Department of Children & Families child abuse hot line received a call that Denis was being overmedicated, and that Rainbow Ranch staff "were not seeking medical attention for Denis when he was overmedicated.''

DCF would not discuss the investigation with a reporter Tuesday.


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Offline Ursus

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Red flags overlooked in 12-year-old's prescription drug deat
« Reply #47 on: June 21, 2010, 07:18:52 PM »
Apparently, investigations into the medication history of Denis Maltez eventually turned towards the psychiatrist that the former Rainbow Ranch had used for most of their clients, Dr. Steven L. Kaplan:

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The Miami Herald
Red flags overlooked in 12-year-old's prescription drug death
The prescription-drug death of 12-year-old Denis Maltez raises troubling questions about the state's safety net for disabled kids.

BY CAROL MARBIN MILLER · cmarbin@MiamiHerald.com
Posted on Monday, 04.19.10



Denis Maltez, 12, is pictured the day before he died. The Miami-Dade Medical Examiner's Office attributed the death to a life-threatening side effect of over-medication. In his deposition, Maltez's psychiatrist Dr. Steven Kaplan said he is not responsible for Denis' death. "I don't believe he died of anything that I did,'' he said.

Born with autism, 12-year-old Denis Maltez was "hyper, needy, pesty,'' his psychiatrist wrote following a May 2007 visit.

Dr. Steven L. Kaplan solved the 70-pound boy's problems with a prescription pad, writing orders for two different anti-psychotic drugs along with a tranquilizer and a mood stabilizer -- two of them in the highest doses recommended for adults, records show.

When state medical regulators sent Kaplan letters suggesting the dosages were worrisome, he ignored them.

Two weeks after Kaplan last saw the boy, on May 23, 2007, Denis simply stopped breathing. The Miami-Dade medical examiner's office attributed the death to a life-threatening side effect of over-medication, records show.

"I . . . never had any suspicion he was being overmedicated,'' Kaplan testified in a November 2009 sworn statement.

A review of records from three state agencies, however, makes clear that plenty of other people did.

Though a number of Florida agency heads have wrung their hands about Kaplan's methods for more than three years, he has never been disciplined. The state Medicaid program, which insures the needy, asked the state Board of Medicine to investigate Kaplan in 2008, but the complaint was dismissed, records show.

Disability administrators encouraged underlings to send him new patients just as the agency's chief described his practices as "very disturbing.''

QUESTIONS

Florida's regulatory history with Kaplan -- which includes four state agencies and thousands of pages of records -- raises important questions. Among them: Does the state have an adequate regulatory scheme for doctors who work with the most vulnerable? Can the state effectively oversee doctors who reject advice from their peers?

"Three agencies all raised concerns and red flags, and each agency was saying this is somebody else's job to take it a step further,'' said Department of Children & Families Secretary George Sheldon. "I'm not sure what the solution is.''

Sheldon blamed much of the problem on historically poor billing rates for doctors who are paid by Medicaid, the state and federal insurance program for the poor and disabled.

"I think it's difficult to recruit in the Medicaid arena any child psychiatrist,'' Sheldon said. "The rates really do have an impact on who is willing to do it.''

Kaplan, who mainly practices in Miami-Dade, declined to speak with a Miami Herald reporter.

With as many as 800 patients in South Florida -- all but one percent of them disabled or impoverished children insured by either Medicaid or Medicare -- Kaplan is listed by the Agency for Healthcare Administration as number five on their list of doctors whose mental health prescriptions were red-flagged by an oversight group.

Denis was 8 when his volatility and violent outbursts prompted his mother, Martha Quesada, to move him into a sparkling new Miami group home called Rainbow Ranch. Administrators for the Agency for Persons with Disabilities had recommended the home, run by a man who had once pleaded guilty to practicing medicine without a license.

In May 2006, the owner of Rainbow Ranch discontinued Denis' treatment by a team at Jackson Memorial Hospital and instead hired Kaplan, who already was treating the group home's other residents, Kaplan said in a deposition taken Nov. 2 by Quesada's attorney, Howard Talenfeld.

In testimony that is part of an ongoing lawsuit by Denis' mother, Kaplan acknowledged that he never once spoke to Quesada before prescribing powerful mind-altering drugs, and never sought nor obtained her consent for treatment.

"I was told that the boy's mother had abandoned him,'' Kaplan testified. In fact, Quesada had never been stripped of her parental rights by the state, and had remained actively involved in Denis' care.

Denis was prescribed 20 milligrams of Zyprexa, 800 milligrams of Seroquel -- the highest adult dose for both anti-psychotics, a reviewer said -- one-half milligram of Klonopin, a tranquilizer and 2000 milligrams of Depakote, a mood stabilizer -- also a high dose for Denis' 70-pound frame. Neither of the anti-psychotic drugs has been approved for use with children.

In his deposition, Kaplan testified he was aware that the two anti-psychotic drugs both carried an "increased risk of sudden cardiac death.''

By early July, 2006, group home workers had told Kaplan the boy was "lethargic and unresponsive in the morning,'' Kaplan said in his deposition. On July 17 that year, teachers at Denis' school noted that he was sleeping through class, and he was taken to Miami Children's Hospital for emergency medical treatment.

That same month, on July 24, Kaplan received a letter from the Medicaid Drug Therapy Management Program for Behavioral Health, a program of the Agency for Health Care Administration run by the University of South Florida, questioning his medication of Denis. On four "key'' indicators, the letter said, Kaplan's prescribing of drugs to Denis fell outside generally accepted practices.

And AHCA was not the only state agency with concerns.

DCF received its first report involving Denis on Oct. 26, 2006. The report made some findings of medical neglect based on a teacher's complaints that Denis was "sleeping in class, shaking and trembling.''

And on Jan. 9, 2007, DCF received another report that, among other things, Denis had "a history of being overmedicated -- based on an August 2006 visit to Baptist Hospital with symptoms of overmedication. "Denis was sleepy because he was over-medicated,'' a DCF investigator was told.

In all, DCF conducted six investigations of Denis' well-being, some of them including allegations that Denis was being over-drugged, an Agency for Persons with Disabilities report says. Sheldon said his agency had received a total of eight calls to the state hot line about Kaplan.

WARNINGS

The disabilities agency also had been warned that Kaplan's patients appeared to be drugged.

An April 2007 memo from an APD administrator said a number of caregivers in Miami had expressed concerns that Kaplan's patients at Rainbow Ranch appeared to be overmedicated. A former group home manager said she found "clients always asleep and barely walking.'' The mother of one boy said he went home for Thanksgiving all doped up.

Denis last saw his psychiatrist on May 10, 2007. In progress notes from the visit, Kaplan wrote the boy was sleepy during the day, and school officials felt he was drugged. He added: "Hyper, needy, pesty.''

Denis died two weeks later, on May 23, 2007. He was 12.

In his deposition, Kaplan said he is not responsible for Denis' death. "I don't believe he died of anything that I did,'' he said.

After Denis' death, APD hired a psychiatrist, Jorge J. Villalba, to study the group home's practices. He reported "overmedication with sedation of clients,'' noting that 99 percent of the group home residents were on an anti-psychotic drug.

Villalba wrote that Denis had been on three different mental health drugs, two of them in the maximum dose, and that "in combination, all three of these agents have additive effects as a central nervous system depressant.'' The drugs, he added, "may have been contributing factors in the client's death.''

The following December, the Miami-Dade medical examiner's office concluded Denis did die of overmedication, from a disorder called Serotonin Syndrome.

A week after the medical examiner's report was released, on Dec. 28, 2007, the then-head of the disabilities agency, Jane E. Johnson, called the case "very disturbing -- especially if that psychiatrist is still providing services through [the] Medicaid state plan.''

During the next two years, administrators at both the healthcare and disabilities agencies continued to monitor Kaplan's activities, writing dozens of e-mails and reports:

  • A nurse on staff at APD noted on Feb. 5, 2008, that one boy under Kaplan's care "was taking 10 medications in total,'' including two anti-psychotic drugs and two tranquilizers. "All of the medication listed cause somnolence,'' the nurse wrote.
  • Thirteen days later, on Feb. 28, 2008, Kaplan received an "academic detailing'' visit by a pharmacy expert from the University of South Florida, as part of the university's effort to oversee problematic prescribers for the state healthcare agency. Though Kaplan was reportedly "very courteous and professional,'' the reviewer noted, "he didn't appear familiar with the material or interested in the guidelines.''
  • In mid-March 2008, several disabilities administrators exchanged e-mails voicing worries about Kaplan. "He's still practicing and we're concerned,'' Chuck Faircloth, APD's inspector general, wrote on March 12.

    The next day, Evelyn Alvarez, a top Miami administrator, wrote: "Our medical case manager as well as I continue to have concerns regarding the abundance of meds that he is prescribing to some of our consumers.''
  • Two months later, another USF monitor visited Kaplan in his office. Kaplan, he wrote, said that his patients are "schizophrenic and become violent, aggressive, dangerous'' -- making such medication necessary. "Provider states that he does not use antipsychotic medication for sedation,'' a report says.
  • In June, 2008, while both agencies were expressing concern about Kaplan's use of mental health drugs, at least two APD administrators suggested he be considered for new patients when scores of disabled people were to be moved from a large institution in Fort Myers into group homes.

    "He has lots of clients, so he may well qualify from the point of view of a large and varied practice,'' wrote Alvarez, who only three months earlier had expressed concerns.
  • A USF monitor once again visited Kaplan on May 15, 2009.

    "He said he did not find the time to deal with non-important things such as paperwork,'' a report says of the visit. "He said he had been practicing long enough to know how to treat his patients and was tired of being told what to do.''

STATE CONCERNS

In his deposition, Kaplan acknowledged he received "hundreds'' of letters from the state suggesting he revise his prescribing practices. "I didn't think it required any kind of response,'' he said. He later added: "I never thought of myself as a red-flagged physician.''

Talenfeld, Quesada's lawyer, urged healthcare and disability administrators in a letter to better protect disabled children, "who are powerless to protect themselves from being unnecessarily drugged for the convenience of staff. . . . Without proper oversight and action by your respective state agencies, these individuals will continue to be in harm's way.''

Administrators at AHCA declined to discuss the agency's history with Kaplan at length. In an e-mail to The Herald, the agency's spokeswoman, Tiffany Vause, said it was "extremely difficult to measure the quality of prescribing practices'' based upon Medicaid claims.

The USF program, she said, enables doctors to explain their practices -- which may be entirely appropriate -- or to change their habits once they are better informed.

"Dr. Kaplan is being monitored through this system and has received feedback from the USF clinical staff, Vause said. "The agency is closely monitoring this physician's claims and the unique patient caseload he treats and will take appropriate action. This can include termination from the Medicaid program.''


Copyright 2010 Miami Herald Media Co.
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