This is a remarkable story of how unpaid( ? -- formally they were surely 
low-paid) workers stayed on the job,  the only ones in the story acting 
responsibly --  to save the lives of some patients and to comfort others.

Gene




Cook, caregivers struggled to aid center's residents
Will Kane and Carolyn Jones
Updated 8:03 am, Wednesday, October 30, 2013

10-30) 08:02 PDT CASTRO VALLEY --Maurice Rowland knew that the closure notice 
stuck on the front door of his workplace meant the assisted-living residential 
facility was to be closed Thursday night because of a license revocation.

But why, he wondered, were 19 of the center's 32 residents still there - some 
with Alzheimer's, others with what he believed to be schizophrenia, all of them 
hungry and wanting dinner.

Almost all the caregivers had left. The manager and owners were nowhere to be 
found. Rowland was the cook, hired three months earlier to prepare meals for 
the residents at Valley Springs Manor in Castro Valley.

"I didn't know what was going on, but I couldn't just leave them there," 
Rowland said Tuesday from his Hayward home. "We had built a friendship. So I 
did the best I could."

Over the next 40 hours, Rowland and two caregivers - none of whom had been 
scheduled to work or asked by management to stay - frantically cooked, cleaned 
and bathed the residents, gave them their medications, and helped them in and 
out of their beds and wheelchairs. But they were in over their heads, and there 
were medication foul-ups. Residents became ill, and Rowland and the caregivers 
called 911 six or seven times, he said, before emergency responders finally 
took the last of the residents Saturday.

<snip>

full at:  
http://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/Cook-caregivers-struggled-to-aid-center-s-4937888.php
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