Failure to Protect Residents From Abuse During Resident-to-Resident Altercations
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to protect residents from abuse by other residents, resulting in two separate resident-to-resident altercations involving four residents. In the first incident, one resident with severe cognitive impairment, major depressive disorder, vascular dementia, psychotic and mood disturbances, and anxiety was found on the floor next to her bed with blood on her face after staff heard yelling from a shared room. Documentation shows that another resident in the room, who also had severe cognitive impairment, dementia, major depressive disorder, anxiety, intrusive behaviors, poor boundaries, delusional thoughts, and poor impulse control, admitted to hitting her roommate in the face several times after believing she had been insulted and accused of cheating with the roommate’s husband. The injured resident was assessed with hematomas on the back of the head, a facial laceration under the nose, a bloody nose, and later imaging showed a shallow abrasion of the upper lip and mild tenderness of the left knee. Witness accounts from staff and CNAs confirmed that the aggressor resident struck the victim with a closed fist and pulled her hair, causing the victim to lose balance and fall to the floor. The resident who was the aggressor in the first incident had an existing order for behavior tracking related to intrusive behaviors and crossing other residents’ boundaries, as well as a care plan focus on behavioral disturbances including intrusive behaviors, poor boundaries, pacing, delusional thoughts, and physical aggression related to dementia and poor impulse control. Despite these identified risks, the two residents were roomed together, and there is no indication in the report that the care plan for the aggressor resident had been focused on preventing such altercations with roommates prior to the event. The victim resident’s care plan also identified problematic behaviors related to anxiety and agitation, including pulling out her hair, and interventions included not invading her personal space. Staff interviews indicated that the victim resident had paranoid thoughts about staff and residents attempting to poison her and that such paranoid behaviors were considered her baseline. The combination of both residents’ behavioral and cognitive profiles, along with their shared room arrangement, contributed to the altercation in which one resident physically assaulted the other. In the second incident, another resident with borderline personality disorder, major depressive disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, Huntington’s disease, and a history of physical and verbal aggression was involved in a hallway altercation with a resident who had schizoaffective disorder, major depressive disorder, dementia, anxiety, epileptic seizures, and a documented history of verbal and physical aggression, including kicking, hitting, pinching, scratching, spitting, biting, and using abusive language toward staff and peers. The victim resident, who had intact cognition and was known to be anxious, sensitive, and demanding, was self-propelling in a bariatric wheelchair toward the front of the hallway and yelled “get out of the way” as she approached the other resident sitting in her doorway. The other resident, who had care plan focuses on psychotropic medication use for behavior management, potential to be physically aggressive, disruptive interpersonal behavior, and instigating behaviors, reacted by loudly cursing and extending her left leg, making brief contact with the victim’s right forearm. The incident was witnessed by an LPN, and a skin check on the victim showed only small old bruises on the hands and forearms with no new discoloration, swelling, or redness. However, despite the documented behavioral history and care plan problem areas for the aggressor resident, the care plan was not reviewed or revised following this incident, and there was no evidence of updated interventions addressing the new altercation. The deficiency is further supported by staff interviews describing frequent resident-to-resident altercations on the behavioral unit and the need to separate residents when such events occur. A CNA reported that the victim in the second incident was consistently anxious and did not tolerate delays, while the aggressor was usually pleasant but had a documented history of aggressive and instigating behaviors. Another CNA and the nurse consultant corroborated the details of the first incident, including the aggressor resident’s admission to hitting her roommate and the observed injuries to the victim. The facility’s abuse and neglect policy defines abuse as the willful infliction of injury with resulting physical harm, pain, or mental anguish, including hitting and punching. The verified findings of physical contact, hitting, and resulting injuries in the first incident, and the physical contact in the second incident, demonstrate that the facility did not adequately protect residents from abuse by other residents as required by its own policy and regulatory standards.
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