Topeka, where he added tap water for painkiller prescribed to patients 105 years.
All three women were prosecuted this past year in the case of federal support that patients and the nursing home administrator says highlights the regulatory gaps in supervision, especially for those working in long-term care facilities which serve some 90,000 Kansans.
Kansas law does not require a nursing home to do their own criminal background checks for licensed medical personnel such as nursing, though it requires them to other workers like janitors. But the Council of State which licenses nurses some 56,000 in Kansas was authorized the legislature to conduct background checks and fingerprinting is only three years ago and then only on a new license