Failure to Protect Residents From Resident-to-Resident Physical Abuse
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to protect residents from abuse, specifically resident-to-resident physical abuse, despite clear behavioral histories and observable warning signs. For one resident, identified as Resident #64, the medical record showed cognitive intactness with mild depression, a history of mood distress and anxiety, and a care plan focused on emotional support and alternative therapies. On 03/22/26, a progress note documented an abrasion on Resident #64’s forehead. Another resident, Resident #80, had diagnoses including psychoactive substance abuse, PTSD, anxiety, depression, bipolar disorder, and a history of restlessness and agitation. Her care plan documented moderate to intense anger, poor listening skills, defensiveness, and verbally aggressive behavior, with interventions to administer medications as ordered and to anticipate and remove triggers for agitation. According to the self-reported incident and witness accounts, Resident #80 entered Resident #64’s room after reportedly becoming upset, told the roommate to be quiet, and threw a can of shaving cream toward Resident #64, resulting in an abrasion to his head. A CNA’s witness statement and an LPN’s interview confirmed that Resident #80 went into the room, instructed the roommate to “shush,” and threw the shaving cream can at Resident #64’s head, after which she fell while returning to her wheelchair. Resident #80 reported that she was extremely upset, retrieved the shaving cream, entered the room, got out of her wheelchair, and threw the can at Resident #64, though she claimed it missed. Resident #64 stated he did not smoke, denied provoking Resident #80, and reported that she entered uninvited and caused the injury to his forehead. Despite these accounts and the documented injury, the Administrator stated he could not substantiate resident-to-resident abuse because he believed Resident #80 did not have logical common sense to think it through, indicating the facility did not recognize or classify the event as abuse in accordance with its own definition of willful infliction of injury. A second incident involved Resident #11 and Resident #102, both cognitively intact per their MDS assessments and able to understand and make themselves understood. Resident #11 had schizoaffective disorder, used a wheelchair, required supervision or touch assist for transfers, and was care planned to reside in the Connections Community due to aggressive behaviors related to schizophrenia. On 11/27/25, documentation showed Resident #11 had a scratch to the cheek and a reddened area, and a progress note recorded that he alleged an altercation with a peer, after which the residents were separated and the physician notified. An SRI described that Resident #102 went to Resident #11’s room, blocked the doorway, refused to move when asked, and then hit Resident #11 in the face; however, the facility later marked this allegation as unsubstantiated, stating evidence indicated abuse, neglect, or misappropriation did not occur. Resident #102’s record showed schizoaffective disorder and major depressive disorder, with care plans noting behavior problems including aggression, destruction of property, refusal of medications, pouring and drinking urine, and sexual inappropriateness. A psychiatric note shortly before the incident documented decreased behaviors and aggression while on medications. Progress notes indicated that Resident #102 had been on a leave of absence with family and remained on leave over several days. An LPN interview revealed that on the day of the altercation, she witnessed Resident #11 attempting to enter his room while Resident #102 blocked the doorway and then punched Resident #11 in the face without provocation. The same LPN reported that Resident #102 had been aggressive all day, cussing at staff and residents, yelling, refusing medications, and that his sister reported he had not taken his medications during the leave of absence; he also refused medications upon return. Despite these documented behaviors and the witnessed physical strike, the facility did not implement new interventions for Resident #102 in response to his medication refusal and escalating aggression and concluded the allegation of abuse was unsubstantiated, contrary to the facility’s policy requiring ongoing assessment, care planning, and monitoring for residents with aggressive behaviors. The facility’s abuse policy defined abuse as the willful infliction of injury, intimidation, or punishment resulting in physical harm, pain, or mental anguish, and clarified that “willful” meant the individual acted deliberately, not that they intended to cause harm. The policy also required ongoing assessments and care planning for residents with verbally or physically aggressive behaviors and those who wander into other residents’ rooms. In both incidents, residents with known behavioral and psychiatric histories engaged in deliberate physical acts—throwing an object and punching another resident—that resulted in documented injuries or skin alterations. Nonetheless, the facility’s investigations concluded that the allegations were unsubstantiated and did not reflect the policy’s definition of abuse or its prevention requirements, demonstrating a failure to ensure residents were free from abuse and to use appropriate assessment and care-planning processes for residents with known behavioral risks.
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