Ohio nursing home camera bill known as "Esther's Law" passes unanimously
Gov. Mike DeWine will soon decide whether to sign a bill that passed unanimously in the Ohio House and Senate a rare circumstance. Its a bipartisan measure to allow families of nursing home residents to put cameras in their rooms, an idea that gained support when those facilities were shut down during the pandemic.
Steve Piskor put a hidden camera in his mother Esthers Cleveland nursing home room ten years ago, when she was in her late 70s and living with dementia. He said though he went to visit her every day, it wasn't until he installed the hidden camera that he saw aides scream at her, spray liquid into her face, fling her body around and neglect her.
The only way that I caught the abuse was with the hidden camera. I mean, there was no other way," Piskor told the House Families & Aging Committee in September, before the committee approved the bill and sent it to the House floor. "I would go to the nursing home every day, and the aides were as nice as can be. I mean, Id walk in and the aides were, Oh, hello Mr. Piskor, how are you? and you know, theyd be, oh, your mother is doing fine today and everythings fine.
Piskor said he first took the video to police, to the nursing home administrator, and then to local news outlets in Cleveland. Eventually, police and the Ohio Attorney General's office investigated the abuse.
Read more: https://www.statenews.org/government-politics/2021-11-22/ohio-nursing-home-camera-bill-known-as-esthers-law-passes-unanimously