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No Country for Old People: Exposing the Care Crisis

No Country for Old People: Exposing the Care Crisis

Update: 2025-09-09
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No Country for Old People, a documentary from filmmaker Susie Singer Carter and former federal prosecutor and US Attorney Rick Mountcastle, investigates widespread neglect and systemic failures in nursing facilities. 

Singer Carter tells a personal story about her mother, who lived with Alzheimer’s disease and received inadequate care in a five-star facility. Mountcastle, known for prosecuting Purdue Pharma for its role in the opioid crisis, connects his legal experience exposing corporate misconduct to troubling practices he uncovered in the long-term care industry. Together, they highlight how residents with dementia and other disabilities are often silenced, overlooked, or neglected by a system that profits from their vulnerability.

In this Live Talk with Being Patient’s founder Deborah Kan, Carter and Mountcastle share the stories behind the film, including Singer Carter’s firsthand account of her mother’s decline in a care facility, and Mountcastle’s insights into how legal and corporate structures perpetuate exploitation. As advocates of the ROAR(Respect, Oversight, Advocacy, and Reform for Long-Term Care) movement, they said they intend their film to give voice to the voiceless and push for accountability. 


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No Country for Old People: Exposing the Care Crisis

No Country for Old People: Exposing the Care Crisis

Being Patient