Failure to Thoroughly Investigate Resident Death and Missing Status
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to thoroughly investigate an alleged incident of possible abuse, neglect, or mistreatment related to a resident’s death. The facility’s abuse/neglect policy required that all alleged or suspected incidents be thoroughly investigated, documented, and reported. On the date of the incident, a registered nurse (RN) arrived on the unit at 4:15 PM and was informed by staff that the resident had a visitor. The RN did not check on the resident again until 9:40 PM when attempting to administer medications and was unable to locate the resident. At 9:49 PM, the resident was found on the floor, face down, unresponsive, with no pulse and no respirations, and was later pronounced deceased by Emergency Medical Services. The resident had diagnoses including chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, respiratory failure, and diabetes mellitus, with intact cognition and a need for supervision/touching assistance with ADLs, and was on continuous oxygen therapy. Nursing progress notes and the accident/incident investigation form showed no documentation that the resident was missing between 4:15 PM and 9:48 PM, and there was no evidence that the nursing supervisor or physician were notified during that period. The accident/incident form concluded the event appeared related to a medical event and documented that the resident was found lying on the floor beside the bed, unresponsive, with no measurable vital signs, and that CPR and EMS were initiated. It also documented that the call bell was within reach but not activated, the bed was in the lowest locked position, the floor was clean and dry, and that no visible injuries were initially noted, although a large skin tear on the right cheek was later observed during postmortem care. Interviews revealed that key information about the incident was not included in the investigation or communicated to leadership. The Assistant DON, who was responsible for incident completion and accuracy, stated they first learned from the incident report and a statement the next day and that it was their first time hearing that the resident had been reported missing, that the adult child had been called by the RN to look for the resident, and that the position in which the resident was found on the floor should have been included. The DON stated they were not notified that the resident had been reported missing prior to being found and only learned this information the day before the interview; they also noted that the facial injury and explanation that it may have occurred during EMS intubation attempts were not documented in the nursing notes. The Administrator similarly reported first learning of the incident via a hospitalization chat after midnight and was not aware that the resident had been initially missing, not monitored hourly, had no record of dinner intake, and had not received medications between 4:00 PM and 9:00 PM, or that the RN had contacted the adult child and RN supervisor about the resident being missing. Leadership stated that, had all this information been known and investigated, the conclusion of the investigation would have been different, demonstrating that the facility did not conduct a thorough investigation into how the resident was found unresponsive.
Penalty
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