Failure to Prevent and Properly Respond to Resident Elopement
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to maintain an environment free of accident hazards and to provide adequate supervision to prevent an elopement for one resident. The resident was admitted in 2026 with multiple serious diagnoses, including closed fractures of the left radius and left tibia, a basilar skull fracture, and a suicide attempt. Physician orders included 1:1 staff assistance for 72 hours due to suicidal ideation and ongoing orders to notify the provider immediately if suicidal ideation or attempts recurred, with monitoring for suicidal ideation every shift. The resident’s care plan identified a focus of risk for leaving the facility without notice related to the prior suicide attempt, with a goal that the resident would remain safe within the facility and demonstrate reduced exit-seeking behavior. Interventions included allowing time for expression of feelings and redirecting the resident if near exits or doorways. A separate care plan focus allowed the resident to smoke with supervision per a smoking assessment, with interventions to educate on the smoking policy, inform and remind of smoking areas and times, and monitor the resident. On the date of the incident, progress notes documented that around 10:19 a.m. the resident told staff that he wanted to sit in front of the facility in his wheelchair. Subsequently, staff observed the resident going toward a nearby gas station. A nurse, who was in the process of medication administration and could see the front of the facility through the windows, saw the resident in his wheelchair leaving the facility parking lot. Another staff member asked the nurse if the resident had a day pass and reported that the resident was headed toward the gas station. The nurse knew the resident did not have a day pass and walked on foot to the gas station, where the resident was found inside the mini market. The nurse asked if the resident was hurt, and the resident stated he was not and that he just wanted snacks or donuts from the gas station. The nurse then accompanied the resident back to the facility. Interviews and record reviews showed that the facility did not follow its own policy and procedure titled "Leave of Absence without Notice." The policy defined elopement as leaving the premises or a safe area without notice or authorization and/or necessary supervision, and outlined steps for locating a missing resident, including alerting personnel using an internal alert code, searching the building and grounds, notifying the Administrator and DON, contacting police if the resident was not located, notifying the physician and family, and documenting assessments and notifications. The Administrator acknowledged that, based on the facility’s definition, the resident’s departure to the gas station without a day pass or appointment met the definition of elopement and that the policy was not followed. A CNA reported that staff wondered where the resident was, asked other staff, and searched the facility, smoking area, and front patio for about an hour without finding the resident, but there is no indication that the facility’s formal elopement protocol, including activation of the internal alert code or notification of police, was implemented. The nurse involved stated she did not know all the forms required for an elopement, and besides a progress note and a call to the physician as directed by the DON and ADON, she did not complete or document a physical or mental assessment as required by the post–leave-of-absence procedure.
Penalty
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