Fifth of Nursing Aides Charged with Abuse Had Priors

According to the Office of the Inspector general, almost a fifth of nursing aides charged with abuse and neglect had prior convictions.

Nineteen percent of long-term care nursing aides who were found guilty of on-the-job abuse, neglect, or property theft in 2010 had prior criminal convictions. Overall, the 300 nurse aides with criminal convictions before their substantiated findings had a total of 622 convictions. The number of convictions per nurse aide ranged from 1 to 14, averaging 2.1 convictions per nurse aide.
An Affordable Care Act (ACA)-mandated analysis of skilled nursing facility background checks for nursing aides found that, out of the 1,611 nursing aides charged with abuse, neglect, or property theft in 2010, 300 had at least one prior criminal convictions, according to a report released by the Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector.
The most common prior conviction (53%) was for crimes such as burglary, shoplifting and writing bad checks. Additionally, ‰ÛÏnurse aides with substantiated findings of either abuse or neglect were 3.2 times more likely to have a conviction of crime against persons than nurse aides with substantiated findings of misappropriation,‰Û the report stated.
The ACA establishes requirements for the background check programs that participating States must implement. States are required to conduct three types of background checks: (1) a search of any State-based abuse and neglect registries and databases, and the abuse and neglect registries of all known States in which the employee lived; (2) a check of State criminal history records; and (3) a fingerprint-based FBI criminal history records check.
The most important point for readers is to ask a prospective facility if they conduct background checks and how those backgrounds checks are conducted.