Failure to Secure Exits and Supervise At-Risk Resident Resulting in Elopement
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to implement sufficient safety interventions and supervision to prevent an elopement for a resident identified as at risk for elopement. The facility had an Elopement Unauthorized Absence Policy that required identification of residents at risk and protection through development and implementation of safety interventions. The resident involved had diagnoses including encephalopathy, stroke, bipolar disorder, and epilepsy, and an elopement assessment identified the resident as at risk for elopement. The resident’s care plan included use of a WanderGuard bracelet, checking its placement and function, monitoring skin integrity, and following facility elopement procedures. A BIMS score of 10 indicated moderately impaired cognition. On the date of the incident, multiple staff statements and interviews established that the resident left the assigned floor and exited the building without staff awareness. One staff member reported seeing the resident walking around the room and did not realize the resident had left the floor, and also noted that the nurse returned from smoking about 45 minutes later and then discovered issues with the elevator lock box and that staff had already been alerted the resident was outside. Another staff member stated they were notified by kitchen staff that a resident wearing a helmet was outside and that the WanderGuard did not alarm when the resident was last observed sitting at the nurse’s station 45 minutes earlier. Staff later reported that when the resident was brought back inside, the WanderGuard system alarmed, and the resident stated they had gone down the stairs. The resident confirmed in interview that they walked to the end of the hall, found the door unlocked with no alarm, went down the stairs, and then outside through another door that also did not alarm. Additional staff interviews and observations revealed multiple unsecured or malfunctioning exit routes that could facilitate elopement. A maintenance employee reported that after the incident, a walkthrough showed the dining room door to the outside propped open with a rock and the third-floor door at the end of the long hall not tightly closed and latched, leading to the stairwell where the resident had exited. Several employees confirmed that the clear plastic lock box over the third-floor elevator button was often found unlocked and open, and that a door leading to the laundry area was sometimes propped open. Observations on a later date showed the laundry room door propped open and a rock lying against the dining room glass door. Another employee confirmed that the locking mechanism and door handle for the door leading from the housekeeping hallway were broken and could not be locked, that the laundry room door from that hallway was left unlocked because the next shift did not have a key, and that the door from the laundry room to the outside had a broken handle and could not be locked from the inside. This created a pathway by which a resident could enter the housekeeping hallway, pass through the unlocked laundry room, and exit the building through an unsecured exterior door. The Nursing Home Administrator did not consider the incident to be an elopement and had no additional documentation to provide at the time of the surveyor’s inquiry. The surveyors determined that these conditions constituted a failure to ensure implementation of all safety measures to prevent elopement for residents in the facility, resulting in an Immediate Jeopardy situation for one of four residents reviewed who were at risk for elopement. The facility’s own documentation showed that elopement assessments for all four residents at risk were only completed on the date of the incident. The combination of an at-risk resident with impaired cognition, unsecured and malfunctioning doors, inconsistent use and monitoring of WanderGuard systems, and lack of timely staff awareness or response to the resident’s departure from the unit led directly to the resident’s unauthorized exit from the building and the identified deficiency.
Penalty
Resources
Below are regulatory guidelines relevant to this citation:
Trusted data from CMS and state health departments
Every citation, penalty and Plan of Correction is sourced from public CMS records (latest release June 24, 2026) and official state health department websites — never guesswork.
Trusted by long-term care providers and associations.



