Even the Finest Nursing Facilities Can Have Unexpected Problems

November 29, 2009
By Michael Allen Kosner on November 29, 2009 1:30 PM |

When hunting for a place to spend their retirements, people tend to look for a degree of luxury. Consider, for example, The Park at Vernon Hills, a retirement community featuring independent and assisted living. It's not a nursing home, but concerns are similar.

Among the amenities The Park advertises as part of its carefree resort-style senior living is "the largest residential rain forest in the world - larger than a football field and more than six stories tall! It is a beautiful site to behold, maintained at a constant 72 degrees and 50 percent humidity. Residents walk along the winding quarter-mile walking path and see the spa, pool, café and more than 5,000 trees and shrubs."

We have no reason to believe The Park is anything but a responsible, caring facility, but even the best can suffer from the unexpected, reminding us again of the importance of vigilance - and the law of unintended consequences. In this case, the unintended seems to be Legionnaire's Disease.

The disease has a mysterious history but is now generally tied to bacteria that can survive in warm, moist, air-conditioning systems of large buildings, including hospitals - and apparently in artificial rain forests. It is spread by inhaling water mist, not by direct contact between individuals.

The Lake County Health Department and the Illinois Department of Public Health are investigating five cases - including two resulting in death - of the disease at The Park. The departments say that, so far, the outbreak is limited to that community. They have targeted the rain forest atrium as a possible source of the bacteria.

The Park has also hired an independent contractor to investigate - and has shut down the rain forest.

"We're taking every precaution and doing everything we can," Jane Woloson, executive director at The Park told the Lake County News Sun.

Michael Kosner, President
The Kosner Firm Chtd.