Failure to Prevent and Manage Resident-to-Resident Physical Abuse by a Behaviorally High-Risk Resident
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to protect multiple residents from resident‑to‑resident physical abuse and to adequately identify, monitor, and care plan for escalating aggressive behaviors. One resident with severe cognitive impairment, schizophrenia, traumatic brain injury, and a documented history of behavior problems and physical aggression was involved in several unprovoked physical altercations with three cognitively intact residents. The resident’s care plan noted a history of delusional and accusatory behaviors, including accusations that staff and peers were choking or hurting them, and a prior behavior of throwing themself on the floor. Interventions focused on medication administration, monitoring for side effects, anticipating needs, and general communication strategies, but there was no documentation of specific behavioral triggers or individualized de‑escalation strategies. A urinalysis collected for undocumented reasons showed a significant E. coli UTI, and an antibiotic was started; however, there was no documentation of increased behaviors prior to the lab draw and no clear linkage in the record between the infection and behavior monitoring. On one date, the aggressive resident physically attacked another resident in the hallway. Witness statements from a CMT and a CNA documented that the aggressor stood up and punched the other resident several times while the victim was trying to get into their room, and staff had to intervene to break up the fight. The aggressor later stated they were angry and acknowledged they should not have fought, but could not identify staff they felt safe talking to. The victim reported that the aggressor approached in the hall, stood up, and knocked their hat off, and that staff came running before the victim could respond. The facility’s investigation concluded that the aggressor was the aggressor and was sent out for evaluation, but also concluded that the incident was not caused by abuse or neglect, was not preventable, and was not a foreseeable ongoing problem despite the resident’s documented behavioral history and risk for physical aggression. There was no contemporaneous nursing documentation of the altercation on the date it occurred, even though subsequent notes described bruising and swelling to the aggressor’s face and forehead attributed to that date. On another date, the same aggressive resident struck two additional residents. One victim reported that the aggressor came into their room, closed the door, hit their right hand with a wheelchair foot pedal, and that the victim then pushed the aggressor over the bed and other items before leaving the room. The victim later complained of right hand pain and swelling, and imaging showed an acute fracture of the fourth metacarpal with significant angulation and displacement; there was no documentation in the progress notes of the cause or events leading to this injury. The second victim reported being punched in the face in the hallway after the aggressor accused them of killing their baby; this resident stated the punch caused ongoing pain, and a skull x‑ray was obtained, which was unremarkable. The facility’s investigation documented that the aggressor hit both residents unprovoked, that one assault in the room was unwitnessed and only discovered through statements, and that the aggressor had a UTI and was on antibiotics. The care plan was updated to add generic interventions such as assessing for pain and injury, skin assessments, room changes, and staff redirection, but it did not identify specific triggers or concrete strategies for staff to use to prevent or de‑escalate physically aggressive episodes. Interviews with nursing staff and leadership indicated that the resident had been moved from a locked behavioral unit to another floor, that staff observed the resident “being different” around the time of the UTI and fights, and that after altercations the resident was supposed to be on increased monitoring for 72 hours, yet the record lacked consistent documentation of such monitoring or of proactive interventions to prevent further resident‑to‑resident abuse.
Penalty
Resources
Below are regulatory guidelines relevant to this citation:
Trusted data from CMS and state health departments
Every citation, penalty and Plan of Correction is sourced from public CMS records (latest release June 24, 2026) and official state health department websites — never guesswork.
Trusted by long-term care providers and associations.



