Unauthorized Use of Wanderguard Restraint and Inadequate Elopement Documentation
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure a resident was free from physical restraint and to obtain required consent from the resident’s conservator before applying a Wanderguard device. The resident had diagnoses of bipolar disorder, dementia without behavioral disturbance, and anxiety disorder, but on admission was documented as alert and oriented to person, place, time, and situation, verbally appropriate, and independent with all ADLs, bed mobility, transfers, and ambulation. An initial elopement risk scale completed at admission identified the resident as not at risk for elopement, and nursing notes and the MAR from admission through several days afterward did not document disorientation, verbalizations of wanting to leave, or exit-seeking behaviors. A physician’s order allowed the resident to go on leave of absence (LOA) with someone, and the admission MDS showed intact cognition (BIMS 15) and no wandering or behavioral symptoms. On a later date, LPN #1 documented that a Wanderguard was placed on the resident’s left ankle due to exit seeking and completed an elopement evaluation identifying the resident as at risk for elopement. However, the note did not indicate that the resident’s conservator of person had been contacted for approval prior to placement of the Wanderguard, and LPN #1 later stated she was unaware the resident was conserved and placed the device without contacting the conservator. The DON, who was the nursing supervisor that day, reported being aware that the resident wanted to leave and that the Wanderguard was applied, and acknowledged that the conservator should have been contacted for approval and that other interventions should have been attempted and documented before using a Wanderguard. Facility documentation, including the MAR and TAR, did not show monitoring for wandering or exit-seeking behaviors after the Wanderguard was applied, despite the care plan later identifying the resident as an elopement risk and including Wanderguard use as an intervention. Subsequently, the resident requested to go on LOA with a friend. At one point, an RN documented that the resident could not go on LOA because neither the resident nor the RN could reach the conservator. Later, a late entry note by another RN documented that the conservator consented to the LOA and that the resident left with a friend, with the LOA book signed. A further late entry note documented that the resident did not return from LOA as expected, attempts to contact the friend, the resident, the resident’s son, and the conservator were unsuccessful, and the police and facility leadership were notified; it was also noted that most of the resident’s belongings were gone. The conservator later reported that the facility had not obtained consent prior to placing the Wanderguard, had not reported prior exit-seeking or wandering behaviors, and that the resident later stated not wanting to return to the facility because it felt like a jail. The facility’s Wanderguard policy allowed placement when the care team decided a resident was at risk for wandering, but the facility did not provide requested policies on conservator notification and behavior monitoring.
Penalty
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