Failure to Provide Individualized Resident Activities
Summary
The facility failed to provide an ongoing program of individualized, meaningful activities designed to meet the interests and needs of two sampled residents. For one resident, the record showed diagnoses including heart failure with hemiparesis, hyperlipidemia, hypertension, insomnia, and colorectal cancer. The resident’s activity evaluation identified interests in card games, crafts, fishing-net related handwork, walking, music, Bible reading, worship, movies, seasonal events, and sightseeing. The care plan stated the resident would participate in group activities five times per week and be involved in individual activities daily, with interests including country and gospel music, Yup'ik radio call-in shows, TV/movies, outings, storytelling, fishing nets, Alaska Native culture, socials, and sports. For the second resident, the record showed diagnoses including chronic low back pain, microalbuminuria, osteoarthritis, a coccyx pressure ulcer, and dementia. The resident’s activity evaluation identified interests in bingo, hand crafts, low-impact exercise, music, mail, worship, movies, seasonal events, sightseeing, and social conversation with family, other residents, staff, and volunteers. The care plan stated the resident would participate in group activities five times per week and independent activities of choice daily, with interests including bingo, cooking, crafts, exercise, music/radio, church, TV/movies, van rides, community events, Native Alaskan culture, socializing, and mail. Survey findings showed that the activity documentation for both residents did not align with the posted activity calendar and did not clearly show individualized or goal-directed activities being provided as planned. Random observations throughout the survey found both residents were consistently observed in their rooms and were not observed participating in or being offered scheduled group or individual activities, with one resident observed participating in bingo only once. During resident council, multiple residents stated they had very limited activity options, that bingo was the only activity they were aware of, and that no activities were offered on the day of the interview. Staff also stated the facility did not have an effective way to accurately track or log activities, that CareTracker did not reflect actual participation, and that refusals could not be documented in the system. The Activities Director stated she was overseeing the program remotely, had not been on site since COVID, relied heavily on staff input, did not create the calendar because she was not there, and had fallen behind on audits and QAPI reviews.
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