Resident Elopement Due to Inadequate Supervision and Alarm Response
Summary
The facility failed to ensure resident safety, resulting in an elopement incident involving a resident identified as R140. On the night of the incident, the resident, who had a history of wandering and was equipped with a wander guard device, managed to exit the facility through a Southwest emergency door. The alarm on the door was triggered, but staff did not respond promptly, allowing the resident to leave the premises unsupervised. The resident was later found by police at a nearby convenience store and returned to the facility. The resident, R140, had been admitted with diagnoses including metabolic encephalopathy and alcohol dependence and was assessed as having a low risk for elopement initially. However, subsequent assessments indicated a high risk for wandering, and interventions such as a wander guard device and 15-minute location checks were implemented. Despite these measures, the resident was able to elope, indicating a failure in the facility's supervision and response systems. Staff interviews revealed that those present on the night of the elopement were either in resident rooms or on break and did not hear the alarm. The facility's investigation did not determine how long the alarm had been sounding before staff responded. The incident highlighted a lapse in the facility's ability to provide adequate supervision and timely response to alarms, which are critical in preventing elopements.
Removal Plan
- Resident no longer resides in the facility.
- A head-to-toe assessment was completed by a licensed nurse.
- The nurse practitioner was notified by a licensed nurse.
- SBAR was completed by a licensed nurse.
- An elopement assessment was completed by a licensed nurse.
- Ad Hoc QAPI meeting was held with the Administrator, Medical Director, Director of Nursing, Admissions Coordinator, Social Services Director, Dietary Manager, Human Resources Director, Housekeeping Director, Activities Director, and Therapy Director.
- One-on-one supervision was initiated, and the care plan was updated by the Interdisciplinary Team.
- The resident Representative was notified in person of the incident by a licensed nurse.
- Every shift behavior monitoring for exit-seeking behavior was continued per MAR and TAR until discharge.
- The resident had a wanderguard placement prior to the incident and was added to the care plan by a licensed nurse.
- Resident was seen by NP and/or physician.
- One-on-one monitoring was placed on orders.
- Resident was monitored by Social Services.
- Resident was reviewed by IDT for changes in behavior.
- An elopement assessment was completed for 81 residents by licensed nurses.
- Clinical and agency clinical staff were educated regarding elopement policy and elopement drill.
- As an ongoing practice, an elopement assessment will be completed upon admission, quarterly and as needed related to changes in the resident's exit-seeking behaviors.
- Discussion at clinical meetings of changes in behaviors with review of orders, review of MARs/TARs, care plan review, nurse' notes review, and reports by staff.
- Care plans will be updated as needed based on these reviews by the clinical leadership and IDT.
- Individual resident's care plans will be reviewed at least quarterly for needed updates as part of the resident's quarterly care plan conference.
- Resident reviewed by IDT for changes in behavior on multiple dates.
- One on Two monitoring and changed to every 15-minute checks with care plan revisions by licensed nurse, which remained until discharge.
- Ad Hoc QAPI meeting was held with the Administrator, Medical Director, and Interdisciplinary Team.
- Elopement Drills conducted daily by the Administrator, Director of Nursing, Housekeeping Supervisor, and/or the Maintenance Director.
Penalty
Resources
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