Failure to Implement Abuse Policy and Protect Residents From Alleged Sexual Misconduct
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to implement its abuse policy by not immediately protecting residents from a nurse aide whose conduct gave rise to reasonable suspicion of sexual abuse, and by failing to investigate multiple allegations of abuse, neglect of dignity, and privacy violations. The facility’s written policy stated that any employee whose conduct created reasonable suspicion of resident abuse could be immediately removed from the floor and, where appropriate, suspended without pay pending investigation, and that all possible incidents of abuse were to be investigated. Despite this, the facility did not remove the implicated nurse aide from resident care or initiate abuse investigations after multiple complaints and grievances from staff and residents. Evidence of prior concerning conduct was documented in the aide’s disciplinary file. A nurse aide reported that the implicated aide asked her personal questions, told her to get on her knees while she was helping provide care for a resident, and then slapped her buttock, stating she was not the first co‑worker he had done this to. Another LPN reported she was aware that the same aide had sexually assaulted a nurse aide who then quit because nothing was done about it. These reports were known to staff, and one LPN stated she was very concerned for other residents, particularly a comatose resident, yet the aide continued to work his regular assignments. Multiple cognitively intact residents reported inappropriate and intrusive touching by the aide during incontinence or nighttime care. One resident who was always continent of urine and had no history of incontinence reported that the aide entered her room around 5:00 a.m. while she was sleeping and put his hand inside her pants to see if she was wet without explanation, which she described as inappropriate and a violation of her dignity and rights. Another resident, usually incontinent, reported that the aide left her naked on the bed twice with the door and curtain open while gathering supplies, made comments about her bowel movements, asked if she slept nude, stated he liked looking at naked women, and told her that he had been accused of touching a nurse aide but was not properly suspended due to staffing. A third resident, always incontinent, stated she did not want the aide to care for her because he startled her awake by sticking his hand inside her brief to check for wetness instead of asking her, unlike other staff. A further allegation involved a cognitively intact resident who was frequently incontinent. Her family member reported that the resident called crying during the night and said the aide had put his hand inside her brief while she was sleeping and that his fingers penetrated her vagina, and that this had occurred two or three other times, causing her to fear being raped. The resident later told another aide that a man had put his hand in her pants and touched her private area, and she was upset. That aide immediately reported to an LPN, who then reported to an RN, who in turn reported to the Director of Social Services and the Assistant DON, stating that the resident said the aide’s finger had penetrated her vagina. A separate RN later asked the Nursing Home Administrator if the aide needed to be replaced on the night shift because a resident said he had “fingered” her, and the administrator was not aware of the allegation at that time. Despite these multiple, consistent reports from residents, family, and staff, the Nursing Home Administrator and acting DON stated that they did not consider the allegation regarding the resident who reported digital penetration to be abuse and documented it only as a grievance. They further stated that the facility did not investigate the allegations made by the four residents because they did not believe the incidents occurred and therefore felt no investigation was needed. The Director of Social Services stated emphatically that she knew no abuse had taken place, denied being told about the specific sexual nature of the allegations, and maintained that the resident would have told her if it had happened. The aide continued to work, including on the same hall as residents who had expressed fear or discomfort, contrary to the facility’s own abuse policy requiring immediate protection and investigation when abuse was reasonably suspected.
Penalty
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