Resident Rights Violated When Nurse Forces Wheelchair Transfer Against Resident’s Wishes
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to protect a resident’s right to dignity, self-determination, and to be treated with respect when a nurse insisted on placing the resident into a wheelchair against the resident’s expressed wishes. The resident involved had diagnoses including Alzheimer’s disease, anxiety, depression, low back pain, cognitive communication deficit, and unspecified dementia with agitation. The admission MDS documented memory problems, no behaviors, and impairment on one side. The resident’s care plan specifically identified a behavior of lowering self to the floor and scooting around, and directed staff that when the resident became restless, they should assist the resident to the floor to scoot, noting that the resident did not think it was wrong to scoot on the floor. On the day of the incident, the resident was on the floor in or near the nurses’ station, consistent with the care plan. According to a progress note by an LPN and written and verbal statements from CNAs, the resident had scooted into the office/nurses’ station area. CNA staff were attempting to guide the resident out and had obtained the resident’s wheelchair to have it available if the resident chose to use it. Multiple staff accounts state that when the resident was asked if they wanted to get up into the wheelchair, the resident said no and did not want to get up. Despite this, RN F, who did not regularly work on that unit and did not know the resident, told staff that they did not care what the resident wanted and directed that the resident be placed into the wheelchair. Staff reports and RN F’s own interview indicate that RN F placed an arm under the resident’s arm and, with assistance from a CNA, lifted the resident into the wheelchair without obtaining the resident’s consent and without recalling that anyone asked the resident if they wanted to transfer. The resident resisted during the transfer and, once placed in the wheelchair, struck RN F. Multiple CNAs, a CMT, the DON, and the Administrator all stated that the resident was care planned to scoot on the floor and that it would be against the resident’s rights to force a transfer to a wheelchair if the resident did not want to get up. RN F later acknowledged that it was against the resident’s rights to force them up and that the resident had the right to remain on the floor. This sequence of events demonstrates that the resident’s care-planned behavior and expressed wishes were disregarded, resulting in a violation of the resident’s right to dignity and self-determination.
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