Failure to Prevent Resident‑on‑Resident Assault Resulting in Head and Facial Injuries
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to protect a resident from abuse by another resident, resulting in physical injury. Resident #101, who had a history of stroke, dementia, seizures, diabetes, cognitive communication deficit, anxiety, and hypertension, was assessed as having moderate cognitive decline with a BIMS score of 8/15 and needing some assistance with care. On the day of the incident, CNAs entered the shared room of Residents #101 and #102 and observed Resident #101 with blood on his face, a swollen right eye and lip, facial bruises, and blood on his teeth. When asked what happened, Resident #101 pointed to his roommate, Resident #102, and stated that they had been in a fight and that the other resident had assaulted him. Nursing staff documented that Resident #101 reported his roommate said he had “cut him off,” then assaulted him while he was lying down. Resident #102’s record showed extensive psychiatric and behavioral history, including traumatic brain injury, psychotic disorder with delusions and hallucinations, schizophrenia, depression, anxiety, adjustment disorder with mixed disturbance of emotions and conduct, frontotemporal neurocognitive disorder, dementia, and a history of alcohol abuse and domestic violence. Prior facility and in‑house documentation described increased behaviors since admission, including rejection of care, yelling, abusive language, threatening behaviors, strange and inappropriate behaviors, refusal of care, suspected drug‑seeking behavior, and episodes of psychosis with poor judgment, poor insight, and poor impulse control. On a prior date, staff documented that Resident #102 appeared intoxicated, was loud and obnoxious, talking to himself, making threats to harm other residents, and had disorganized, slurred, and rambling speech. Social services also documented that his guardian reported a history of domestic violence. Despite this, his initial care plan after admission did not address his history of violent and aggressive behavior toward others. On the day of the altercation, staff reported that Resident #102 had been verbally abusive and agitated all morning, refused care, and did not take his medications the night before. After the incident, nursing and NP documentation indicated that Resident #102 first denied involvement, then stated that his roommate had been scratching his genitals and that he hit him; assessment showed only pre‑existing moisture‑associated skin damage to his scrotum with no new injuries. Resident #101, by contrast, had multiple red, raised, abraded areas on his forehead, a nearly swollen‑shut right eye with abrasions and swelling, swollen and abraded lips, and later hospital documentation of a facial contusion and closed head injury, as well as an imprint of a hand on his chest. The facility’s own abuse prohibition and resident rights policies required a safe environment and freedom from physical abuse, including hitting and similar acts, but the care planning and monitoring for Resident #102 did not consistently reflect or operationalize his known risk for aggression toward others. Care plan review for Resident #102 showed fragmented and delayed behavioral interventions. A care plan for substance abuse was initiated with an intervention for close observation such as q15‑minute checks or 1:1 “as needed,” but this was not clearly dated in the Kardex and was only formally revised later. A separate care plan for mood and hostility did not include interventions to prevent hostility toward other residents and staff until weeks after the assault, and those interventions were tied to the resident verbalizing a desire to harm self or others, which he had not done prior to attacking his roommate. Another care plan addressing potential physical and verbal aggression, agitation, abusive language, and yelling outbursts included 15‑minute checks for 72 hours, which were discontinued well before the assault occurred, leaving Resident #102 without enhanced monitoring at the time he attacked Resident #101. The inconsistency between the care plan and the Kardex regarding close observation and 1:1 supervision, along with the absence of timely, targeted interventions addressing his documented aggressive and threatening behaviors, contributed to the failure to prevent the assault on Resident #101. The facility’s DON acknowledged that Resident #102 had several instances of appearing intoxicated from alcohol or drugs and that the facility became aware of his violent behavior history through his guardian. Staff interviews confirmed that Resident #102 had a pattern of cursing, using derogatory names, being vulgar and disrespectful, and refusing care, including on the morning of the incident. Despite these known behaviors and risk factors, Resident #102 remained in a shared room with a cognitively impaired roommate and without ongoing close observation or 1:1 supervision at the time of the event. This sequence of known behavioral risks, incomplete and inconsistently implemented care planning, and lack of sustained monitoring led to Resident #101 being assaulted by Resident #102 and sustaining documented injuries requiring hospital evaluation and treatment.
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