Failure to Supervise High-Risk Resident Resulting in Elopement Through Unsecured Exits
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to prevent an elopement of a resident who had been clearly identified as a high elopement risk and incapable of unsupervised outside pass privileges. The resident had diagnoses of unspecified mild dementia with behavioral disturbance and bipolar disorder with severe manic episode and psychotic features, with documented moderate cognitive impairment (BIMS score of 12) and mild deficits in memory, attention, and concentration. A community survival skills evaluation documented that the resident could not safely negotiate community streets, did not know the facility address or how to contact the facility in an emergency, could not reliably refrain from self-harm or socially inappropriate behavior in the community, did not know how to seek help in an emergency, and lacked knowledge of potentially dangerous situations. The same evaluation explicitly stated the resident was not capable of unsupervised outside pass privileges and that there would be no community pass. The facility’s own elopement evaluations dated 2/26 and 3/4 identified the resident as high risk for elopement, with multiple risk factors checked: hanging around exits and stairways, physical ability to leave the building, poor judgment and confusion, theme behavior (e.g., belief in responsibilities elsewhere), and responsiveness to environmental cues. Social service documentation on 3/4 described the resident as ambulating independently throughout the unit, intermittently attempting to access exit doors without authorization, and demonstrating poor safety awareness, impaired judgment, and memory deficits, with no successful elopement yet but clear elopement risk. Nursing and social service staff reported that the resident frequently packed bags, attempted to leave via the front door, stated that a son was coming to pick her up, took pictures of exit doors, and exhibited sundowning behavior in the evenings, packing bags and insisting on leaving. A nurse’s progress note on 3/18 documented the resident with packed bags headed to the front entrance in an attempt to leave, requiring redirection back to the room, after which the resident became very angry and screamed. On the evening of the elopement, the nurse supervisor administered the resident’s 6:00 p.m. medications and then continued medication administration for other residents. When he returned around 9:00 p.m. to give remaining medications, the resident was not in the room. The assigned CNA reported last seeing the resident around 8:00 p.m. sitting on the bed with items packed, stating she was leaving the facility. The CNA later stated she had not been informed the resident was an elopement risk and last saw the resident around 8:30–9:00 p.m. before going on break. A family member reported receiving a call from the resident around “7ish,” during which the resident said she did not know where she was but was trying to get to the family member, then became upset and disconnected when told to return to the facility. The family member was unable to reach the resident for several hours and later learned from a bus driver that the resident was at a distant, high-traffic intersection, and arranged for the resident to be transported by bus to a downtown location where the family member picked her up. The facility did not know how or when the resident exited the building, and staff, including the administrator and DON, were unable to determine which door was used. Multiple exit routes were identified that could be opened without a code, delay, or audible alarm, including double doors near the dialysis unit and double doors by the time clock leading directly to an alley behind the facility. Staff acknowledged that these doors were routinely left unarmed/open for staff entry and exit, and that some family members knew to use the employee-only exit after visiting hours. A police report documented that the nurse supervisor initially stated a search had been conducted but later retracted that statement, and that hallway cameras did not record. The report also documented that some residents knew exit passcodes even though they were not supposed to, and a cognitively intact resident was able to state the unit exit code and demonstrate its use. The facility’s elopement policy defined elopement as leaving the premises or safe area without authorization and/or necessary supervision, and excluded only alert and oriented residents who could handle themselves outside; however, the resident in question had been repeatedly documented as cognitively impaired, unsafe in the community, and at high risk for elopement, yet was able to leave the facility without staff awareness or supervision and travel a considerable distance before being located by family.
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