Failure to Initiate Code Purple and Address Intoxication Risk for Resident on Outside Pass
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to follow its own policies for supervising a resident on an outside pass and initiating a Code Purple (missing resident) when the resident did not return at the expected time. The resident, who had moderate cognitive impairment and diagnoses including diabetes, acute kidney failure, depression, and hypertension, signed out at 8:30 A.M. to smoke outside with an expected return time of 5:25. The resident did not return for dinner or evening medications, and staff noted that the resident’s breakfast and lunch were still in the room and that the resident was not present for multiple medication passes. Despite this, staff did not initiate a Code Purple or conduct a search when the resident failed to return by the expected time. The facility’s Resident Outside Pass policy required staff to attempt to contact the resident or responsible party when a resident did not return at the stated time and, if unable to contact the resident, to follow Code Purple procedures. The Elopements and Wandering Resident’s policy defined Code Purple as an elopement outside the facility and required staff to search the building and grounds, notify the Administrator or designee, contact police if the resident was not located, and notify the physician and family or legal representative. In this case, staff on the evening and night shifts were aware the resident had not returned, but interviews showed they either believed the resident had signed out with family, assumed the resident would “pop up,” or did not know they were supposed to initiate a Code Purple. The ADON, who was notified between 10:00 P.M. and 11:00 P.M. that the resident was not in the building, instructed the nurse only to document the situation and did not direct staff to initiate a Code Purple. The resident had a history of falls and of returning from leaves of absence intoxicated, including prior incidents where staff had to assist the resident from the ground outside or in the alley behind the facility. Progress notes documented falls associated with alcohol use, with staff noting the resident smelled of alcohol or was intoxicated, and staff sometimes held medications and notified the nurse when the resident was intoxicated. However, the care plan did not include interventions addressing the resident’s pattern of returning from LOA intoxicated or guidance for staff on how to manage this risk. The resident remained out of the facility all night without a Code Purple or search being initiated. According to hospital records, the resident was later found face down, unresponsive, in a puddle of water approximately two miles from the facility, with scattered abrasions, and was admitted in critical condition before expiring at the hospital. Staff interviews revealed inconsistent understanding and implementation of the facility’s policies. Some CNAs and a CMT stated they did not initially know what Code Purple meant or what to do if a resident did not return from LOA, while others stated that when a resident did not return, they were supposed to notify the nurse, administrator, DON, and family, and initiate a Code Purple with a search of the facility and surrounding neighborhood. The Administrator, who was the ADON at the time of the incident, stated that a Code Purple was to be called when a resident did not return from LOA or eloped, but believed it was not initiated in this case because the resident had stayed out overnight before and was his or her own responsible party. The facility’s failure to initiate a Code Purple and conduct a search when the resident did not return as expected, combined with the lack of care plan interventions addressing the resident’s known history of intoxication on return from LOA, led to the cited deficiency for not ensuring the area was free from accident hazards and not providing adequate supervision to prevent accidents.
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