Failure to Recognize and Report Sexual Abuse of a Minor Resident
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to recognize and report an allegation of sexual abuse involving a minor resident in accordance with federal requirements. A cognitively intact minor resident, identified as Resident #444, with diagnoses including traumatic brain injury, ADHD, anxiety, and depression, reported having received sexual acts from an adult resident, identified as Resident #3, who had diagnoses of ADHD, schizophrenia, and mood disorder. Both residents were documented as cognitively intact with BIMS scores of 15. The facility’s self-report and 5‑day investigation characterized the incident as a consensual sexual encounter between two cognitively intact residents and did not identify Resident #444 as a minor, despite the facility’s knowledge of his age. The events began when an LPN observed the two residents in another resident’s bathroom, with Resident #3 on her knees in front of Resident #444, whose pants were down, and the LPN believed oral sex was occurring. The LPN reported the incident to her supervisor and the residents were separated. Another LPN confirmed that she and the first LPN went to the room, found the assigned resident upset and unaware of the sexual encounter in his bathroom, and then separated the two residents and reported the incident to the DON. The police report later classified the event as a sexual assault of a minor and documented that Resident #3 admitted performing oral sex on Resident #444 after he asked for it, and that she knew his age. Resident #444 also reported that he asked Resident #3 for oral sex, went into the bathroom, closed the door, and that oral sex occurred until they were interrupted by staff. Despite these observations and statements, the facility’s initial and 5‑day reports to the State Agency did not identify Resident #444 as a minor and concluded that the facility was unable to substantiate that abuse occurred, describing the incident as occurring between two consenting individuals. The facility’s documentation of change‑of‑condition monitoring for both residents referenced a “reported event” but did not specify the nature of the event. The incident was reported to police nearly 24 hours after it occurred, and there was no evidence that the facility reported the incident to the Department of Child Services, even though staff and leadership acknowledged that the incident involved an adult and a minor and that the minor could not legally consent. Adult Protective Services later verified an allegation of neglect of a vulnerable adult, identified as Resident #3, and confirmed that Resident #3 sexually assaulted Resident #444 while at the facility. Interviews with the former administrator and former DON showed that they were aware the incident involved an adult and a minor and that it appeared to be a crime, yet the facility’s written investigation did not document the minor status, did not classify the event as sexual abuse, and omitted certain investigative details such as the interview with the resident whose room and bathroom were used. The current DON, who was not employed at the time of the incident, reviewed the investigation and stated she could not determine key details from the documentation, including the exact room where the incident occurred, whether anyone else was present, whether assessments were conducted for the involved residents, or whether DCS was notified. A DCS child safety specialist later reported that the incident and its aftermath had a negative psychosocial effect on Resident #444 and confirmed that, based on his age, he was not able to give consent. These documented failures to properly identify, classify, and report the incident as sexual abuse of a minor, and to notify all mandated entities, constitute the core of the deficiency. The facility also failed to take broader protective steps for other residents at risk as part of its response to the incident. The report notes that the facility did not identify the incident as sexual abuse and therefore did not implement measures such as assessment and monitoring of other residents at risk or interventions and supervision to protect other residents from possible abuse. The APS investigative report verified neglect of a vulnerable adult, Resident #3, due to serious mental illness and confirmed that the sexual assault occurred. Collectively, the record reviews, staff interviews, and external investigative findings demonstrate that the facility did not timely and accurately report the allegation of sexual abuse involving a minor to all required authorities and did not appropriately classify and respond to the event as sexual abuse, leading to the cited deficiency.
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