Failure to Prevent Abuse, Neglect, Misappropriation, and Inadequate Airway Management
Summary
The deficiency involves multiple failures by the facility to protect residents from abuse, neglect, and misappropriation of property, and to ensure care consistent with residents’ assessed needs and care plans. One resident with end stage renal disease, dementia, and anxiety, who was cognitively intact, extended a handshake to another cognitively intact resident with dementia and a history of sexually inappropriate behaviors, including touching self in public, staring at women, making sexual comments, and inappropriate touching of staff and residents. During this interaction at an activity, instead of shaking hands, the resident with known sexual behavior issues reached out and touched the other resident’s left breast. The affected resident moved away from the situation and later verbalized distress related to the incident. The sexually inappropriate resident’s care plan documented prior sexually inappropriate behaviors and prior use of 1:1 supervision when out of bed, but at the time of the incident the resident was not on active 1:1 supervision. Another deficiency occurred when a resident with morbid obesity, lymphedema, and generalized anxiety, who was cognitively intact, was provided incontinence care by a single CNA despite the resident’s Care Kardex directing that rolling left and right required two staff with hands-on assistance. During this care, the resident was turned onto the left side and slipped off the side of the bed onto the floor. The incident and accident report documented the resident lying on the left side on the side of the bed, with full range of motion and no injury noted. The DON acknowledged signing off on the fall progress note and that an incident report was completed, but there was no further investigation, no statements collected, and the event was deemed non-reportable to the Department of Health, despite documentation that the resident required two-person assistance for bed mobility. A further deficiency involved another cognitively intact resident with malignant neoplasm of the head, face, and neck, cirrhosis, and an artificial laryngectomy tube. A nurse crushed an oxycodone tablet, placed it in a medication cup in the resident’s room, briefly left, and on return found the medication missing. The nurse assumed the resident had taken the medication, confronted the resident with this accusation, and the resident denied taking it. The nurse nonetheless documented the narcotic as administered on the MAR and did not document any incident in the record. The resident became visibly upset, cried, and contacted law enforcement; police responded but deferred the matter to the facility, and there was no documented facility investigation into the allegation of abuse or misappropriation of the medication. The Medical Director later stated they were not notified of the missing narcotic or missed dose and that the nurse should not have signed it as given if the facts were unclear. In addition, the same resident with an artificial larynx had a comprehensive care plan reflecting multiple high-risk clinical needs, including airway management related to a tracheotomy/artificial larynx, enteral nutrition, cancer-related pain, impaired communication, decreased mobility, and fall risk. The care plan included interventions such as monitoring respiratory status, managing secretions, providing suctioning as needed, maintaining airway patency, administering tube feedings, managing pain, and assisting with ADLs. However, review of the physician order summary for the relevant period showed no physician orders for tracheostomy or laryngectomy care, including suctioning, stoma care, humidification, respiratory therapy involvement, or bedside emergency airway supplies such as a spare tube, obturator, suction equipment, or emergency airway instructions. The orders were limited to general care such as medications, wound care, enteral feeding, and routine monitoring, creating a discrepancy between the resident’s documented clinical condition and care plan needs and the absence of corresponding physician orders.
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