Failure to Supervise Exit-Seeking Resident and Maintain Audible Door Alarms Resulting in Elopement
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide adequate supervision and ensure that a door alarm was audible to staff, which allowed a cognitively impaired, exit‑seeking resident to elope from the building. The resident had diagnoses of dementia with behavioral disturbance, Alzheimer’s disease, anxiety, major depressive disorder, and a need for assistance with personal care. The resident was documented as severely cognitively impaired on the MDS, required supervision for bed mobility, transfers, and ambulation, and had been assessed as high risk for elopement. Social service and other assessments documented wandering behavior, inability to safely navigate community streets, lack of awareness of dangerous situations, and a need for 24‑hour supervision and monitoring. The care plan identified risk for wandering and/or elopement, impaired safety awareness, and included interventions such as monitoring the resident’s location, providing diversions, and performing visual checks every 15 minutes. In the weeks prior to the elopement, multiple records documented the resident’s escalating behaviors and repeated exit‑seeking. Behavior tracking showed exit‑seeking and elopement attempts on several dates, and nursing notes described the resident wandering into other residents’ rooms, being agitated with redirection, yelling at staff and a roommate, following staff, and physically punching staff. Staff documented that the resident repeatedly attempted to exit the facility, pushed on exit doors, and demanded that staff open the doors, requiring frequent redirection away from exits. A community survival skills screen documented that the resident was not capable of unsupervised outside privileges. Despite these documented risks and the care‑planned 15‑minute visual checks, staff interviews revealed that the visual checks were not consistently completed as ordered. On the day of the elopement, staff last observed the resident around lunchtime when the resident was redirected from another resident’s room back to the nurse’s station area, at a time when no staff were present on the hall because CNAs were in a resident room with the door closed and the LPN was in the dining room with other residents. During this period, the resident exited the facility without staff awareness. Multiple staff members who were present near the front door or on the resident’s hall reported that they did not hear any door alarms sound at the time of the elopement. Subsequent testing of the exit doors by maintenance showed that pushing on the alarm bar produced only intermittent and then continuous beeping at the door itself, with no audible alarm at the nurse’s station, and that opening the exit doors did not trigger any additional audible alarm. The front door was configured so that a louder alarm would not sound unless the door remained open beyond a set delay, allowing a resident to pass through without staff being alerted. The resident was later found by a community member eight blocks away, having sustained abrasions to the right palm and a contusion to the right knee from an unwitnessed fall, and was noted to be alert and oriented only to self, consistent with baseline cognitive impairment. Additional documentation after the elopement continued to show the resident’s ongoing exit‑seeking and aggressive behaviors, including making fists, asking to leave, demanding that CNAs open the door, and requiring multiple redirection attempts. Staff interviews confirmed that some nurses were unaware of existing elopement binders listing high‑risk residents, and that prior to the incident, residents at high risk for elopement did not all have specific elopement care plans distinct from wandering care plans. The surveyors determined that these failures in supervision, failure to implement care‑planned 15‑minute visual checks, and failure to maintain an audible and effective door alarm system resulted in the resident’s unsupervised elopement, fall, and injuries, and exposed the resident to significant danger including road hazards, uneven terrain, and railroad tracks.
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