Verbal Abuse and Failure to Respond to Resident’s Request for Incontinence Care
Summary
The deficiency involves a failure to protect a resident from verbal abuse by a CNA. The resident, who had type 2 diabetes mellitus with foot ulcers, absence of the left foot, morbid obesity, and a mood disorder, was care planned for ADL self-care deficits and required maximum assistance for toileting and two-person dependent assistance with transfers. A quarterly MDS showed the resident had a BIMS score of 14, indicating intact cognition, and required substantial assistance for toilet transfers. On the morning in question, an event note documented that the resident was wheeling herself in her wheelchair in the hallway to the nurses’ station to request assistance with a brief change when a CNA seated at the nurses’ station heard her, turned around, and made an inappropriate comment, after which the resident began crying. The facility’s investigation materials described differing accounts of the interaction but consistently referenced the use of profanity by the CNA in the context of the resident’s request for care. The resident reported that she had not received care that morning, had urinated on herself, and had activated her call light, but the CNA would not answer it. The resident stated that when she told the CNA she was going to notify someone about the lack of assistance, the CNA became angry, stood up, and told her, “it’s your fucking fault,” which made her cry and feel unsafe. A staff member (Staff #118) provided a written statement and interview indicating that around 5:15 a.m. he observed multiple call lights on, including the resident’s, and saw the CNA sitting at the nurses’ station on her phone. He stated that the resident came out of her room begging for help with a brief change, that the CNA refused because she did not have a second person to assist, and that at one point the CNA told the resident, “it was [the] resident’s fucking fault,” after which the resident went back to her room crying. The CNA involved had documented training on professional language and on abuse, neglect, exploitation, resident rights, respect in the workplace, and prevention of abuse, including mental and verbal abuse. Her written statement acknowledged that the resident’s call light had been on since about 4:00 a.m. and that the resident later came out of her room angry about the wait; she claimed she agreed with the resident and went downstairs to get another CNA, and admitted she may have used the term “fuck” but denied directing it at the resident. Another CNA (Staff #24) stated that the resident was on “cares in pairs” because she accused staff of not helping her, that the resident used her call light frequently and wanted care immediately, and that delays could occur due to the need for two staff, though communication about delays could ease the situation. A staff member (Staff #38) reported that the resident later said she had a rough morning because she needed help and the CNA was rude and blamed her for not getting care due to the “cares in pairs.” The facility’s abuse policy defined mental and verbal abuse as conduct, including the use of profanity, that can cause humiliation, intimidation, fear, shame, agitation, or degradation, and included mocking, insulting, ridiculing, and threatening residents, including depriving a resident of care, as examples of mental and verbal abuse. The facility’s documentation also showed that the CNA had signed an education acknowledgment form stating she was trained to use professional language and that profanity was prohibited at work. The investigation report and staff interviews consistently placed the resident in a position of repeatedly requesting assistance for incontinence care, with her call light on and her coming into the hallway to seek help, while the CNA did not provide the requested care and used or was alleged to have used profanity in response to the resident’s complaints. The DON acknowledged receiving a report that the CNA was not helping the resident and had sworn at her, and stated that verbal abuse of residents can affect a resident’s psychological well-being. The combination of the resident’s report, corroborating staff statements, and the facility’s own policy definitions formed the basis for the finding that the resident was not kept free from verbal abuse.
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