Failure to Thoroughly Investigate Large Chest Bruise and Abuse Allegations
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to thoroughly investigate significant bruising and potential staff-to-resident abuse for one cognitively impaired resident. The resident had severe intellectual disability, muscle wasting, abnormal posture, osteoporosis, and was dependent on staff for most ADLs and transfers, using a wheelchair. An abuse/neglect screening identified the resident as at moderate risk for abuse, but the care plan did not document the resident as being at risk for abuse. An incident was identified involving an injury of unknown origin, initially focused on bruising to the resident’s left index finger, and the facility opened an event record documenting a bruise on the right hand and a large bruise on the left chest with vocal complaints of pain. Multiple staff interviews and observations described events in which a night nurse took the resident from the lobby to her room, shut the door, and left her inside, while the resident was heard faintly yelling and knocking. CNAs reported that the resident was repeatedly found shut in her room and had to be let out, and that the resident was angry and immediately stated that the nurse hurt her, pointing to her chest and finger. Staff consistently stated that the resident did not have the strength to cause the large chest bruise herself, that she was not capable of opening the door, and that while she occasionally caused small, fingerprint-sized bruises, she did not have a history of making false accusations against staff. The resident’s roommate reported hearing commotion and yelling between the resident and a staff member, followed by the door being closed and the resident making a lot of noise until other staff opened the door. Despite these reports and the documented large bruise on the resident’s chest, the facility’s investigation and final report focused only on the finger injury and involuntary seclusion, without thoroughly investigating the chest bruise or the resident’s repeated statements that the nurse hurt her. The Administrator acknowledged that the chest bruise was not initially present but was later documented as a 5-inch by 5-inch bruise with pain, and further acknowledged not investigating that bruise and being unable to explain why it was not investigated after discovery. The former DON stated that a complete skin assessment should be done at the beginning of an investigation and that the chest bruise should have been documented and investigated, and also stated that the resident’s statements that the nurse hurt her should have been taken seriously. The facility was unable to produce any evidence that the bruise on the resident’s chest or the resident’s statements were thoroughly investigated, despite a policy requiring that any incident or allegation involving abuse, neglect, or mistreatment result in an investigation, including injuries of unknown source that are suspicious due to their extent or location. The facility’s own policy on Abuse and Retaliation Prevention and Reporting required that any incident or allegation involving abuse or mistreatment result in an internal investigation, and defined injuries of unknown source as those not observed or not explainable by the resident and suspicious due to extent, location, or pattern. The large chest bruise, documented in the event record and repeatedly described by staff as extensive and painful in appearance, met the criteria for an injury of unknown source. However, the facility did not conduct or document a thorough investigation into the cause of this bruise, did not fully interview all relevant staff (such as the CNA who discovered the resident behind the closed door in the morning), and did not reconcile the resident’s consistent statements that the nurse hurt her with the physical findings. This failure to follow policy and to investigate all injuries and allegations of abuse led to the cited deficiency. The surveyors’ findings show that while the facility substantiated involuntary seclusion based on the nurse pushing the resident into her room and shutting the door, it did not extend the investigation to encompass the full scope of potential abuse, including the large chest bruise and the resident’s ongoing verbal reports. Staff, including CNAs, nurses, the former DON, and Social Services, consistently reported that the resident was pointing to her chest and finger and saying the nurse hurt her, and several staff explicitly stated that the resident could not have caused the chest bruise herself. Despite this, the facility’s documentation and investigative efforts remained incomplete, and no evidence was produced to show that the chest bruise or the resident’s abuse allegations were thoroughly investigated as required by facility policy.
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