Failure to Implement Abuse-Prevention Policies for Aggressive Resident on Memory Care Unit
Summary
Facility staff failed to implement abuse-prevention policies and provide adequate supervision and protection from abuse, neglect, and theft for multiple cognitively impaired residents on the Memory Care Unit, particularly in relation to one resident with escalating aggressive and sexually inappropriate behaviors. The facility’s written policies require identification of hazards, individualized supervision based on assessed needs, and staff competency in recognizing and reporting accident hazards and abuse. Despite these policies, the same resident (Resident #14), who had severe cognitive impairment and behavioral disturbances, was repeatedly involved in resident-to-resident altercations that resulted in physical harm and potential sexual abuse of other residents with severe cognitive impairment. In one incident, a resident with Lewy body dementia, frontotemporal neurocognitive disorder, and severe cognitive impairment (Resident #17) was involved in a physical altercation with Resident #14. Staff heard a scream and a hard fall and then found the cognitively impaired resident on the floor near a food cart, with the other resident standing nearby. Both residents reported that the cognitively impaired resident slapped Resident #14 and that Resident #14 then pushed her to the floor. The injured resident was later documented to have a bump on the back of her head. This event occurred despite the facility’s policy that resident supervision and accident prevention are facility-wide priorities and that supervision should be adjusted based on individual risk and environmental hazards. In another incident, a severely cognitively impaired female resident (Resident #16), who could not complete a cognitive assessment, was found in bed fully covered with blankets while Resident #14 was lying on top of the covers, fully clothed, in the same bed. A CNA later observed that the female resident’s brief was deviated to the side with her buttocks exposed. Neither resident could recall the incident. The facility’s policies state that residents have the right to be free from abuse and that staff must identify and mitigate hazards, including through adequate supervision and individualized interventions, yet a male resident with known behavioral issues was able to enter and remain in a vulnerable female resident’s bed. A further incident involved a male resident with Alzheimer’s dementia and severe cognitive impairment (Resident #15), who wandered into Resident #14’s room and used a racial slur, after which Resident #14 struck him. Staff later observed the injured resident exiting the room with a bloody rag to his mouth, stating that he had been hit, and documentation confirmed a new laceration to his lower lip. In another serious event, a female resident with dementia, PTSD, psychosis, chronic pain, and on long-term anticoagulant therapy for deep vein thrombosis (Resident #2) was found in a struggle with Resident #14 over a reacher/grabber tool. She reported that he had hit her in the left eye, and staff documented swelling and bruising to that eye. Her condition subsequently deteriorated, with abnormal vital signs and decreased responsiveness, and she was transferred to the hospital, where her responsible party later reported being told that she had suffered a significant brain bleed related to being hit while on a blood thinner. These repeated incidents, all involving the same resident aggressor on the Memory Care Unit, occurred despite facility policies requiring a systems approach to safety, close supervision based on individual risk, and protection of residents’ rights to be free from abuse. Post-incident documentation for Resident #14 showed that, after the altercation resulting in the eye injury, he was again observed in a female resident’s room attempting to get into bed with her while clothed and wearing a brief, and he became physically aggressive when redirected, making grabbing motions and attempting to hit staff. A psychiatric nurse practitioner documented that staff reported increasing aggressive and sexually inappropriate behaviors, including entering a female resident’s room and attempting to get into bed with her, and that these behaviors placed him and others at risk. Despite this, he was noted as no longer being on one-to-one supervision per physician order, and surveyors later observed him ambulating freely throughout the Memory Care Unit hallways and common areas with direct access to other residents. The facility’s own leadership and social services staff acknowledged in interviews that resident-to-resident physical altercations and a male resident in bed with a cognitively impaired female resident who could not consent would constitute abuse, and that residents have the right to be free from abuse and to feel safe, yet the same resident continued to have unrestricted access to other vulnerable residents on the unit.
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