Failure to Identify and Report Resident-to-Resident Altercations and Accident as Abuse
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to identify multiple resident-to-resident verbal and physical altercations, as well as a resident accident, as reportable abuse or potential abuse, and to notify the State Survey Agency and report investigation results as required by its abuse prevention and reporting policy and state regulation. The facility’s policy required that any allegation meeting the definition of abuse be reported to the State Survey Agency within two hours if serious bodily injury occurred or within 24 hours if it did not, that a thorough investigation be completed and documented, that further abuse be prevented during the investigation, and that investigation results be reported within five working days. The policy defined verbal and mental abuse as oral, written, or gestured language that demeaned or humiliated, and neglect as disregard for resident care, comfort, or safety that resulted in or could have resulted in harm or distress. Despite this, the facility’s incident logs and investigation files for multiple residents showed no documentation that these events or their investigation findings were reported to the state agency. One component of the deficiency concerns a resident accident involving a cognitively intact resident with paraplegia who used a motorized wheelchair independently. The resident’s mobility care plan did not identify use of a motorized wheelchair or include goals and interventions for safe motorized wheelchair mobility. The incident log documented that this resident was struck by a vehicle while out in the community, causing them to fall from the wheelchair and sustain abrasions to the right leg, and resulting in damage to the wheelchair that required a wheel adjustment by a technician. The facility’s incident report recorded that the resident returned to the facility at night and reported that their motorized wheelchair had been hit by a car, causing it to tip and throwing them out, with resulting “road rash” and a dented wheel. There was no documentation that this accident or the investigation findings were reported to the State Survey Agency as required. The remaining components of the deficiency involve multiple resident-to-resident altercations, both physical and verbal, that were not treated as reportable allegations of abuse. For one cognitively intact resident with anxiety, depression, and impulsive behaviors, the incident log showed a physical altercation with another cognitively intact resident in a smoking area after a disagreement, during which both residents hit each other. The former DNS documented that this altercation could be considered abuse but concluded that abuse was not suspected, and there was no documentation of state reporting. The same resident was later reported by a nursing assistant to have told another resident to get out of their way and to have backhanded that resident on the shoulder while passing; both residents were assessed and the aggression documented, but again there was no documentation that the allegation or investigation results were reported to the state. Additional unreported incidents included verbal and physical aggression among various cognitively intact and cognitively impaired residents with diagnoses such as dementia with behavioral disturbance, depression, bipolar disorder, anxiety, and non-traumatic brain dysfunction. In one case, a resident with a history of verbally aggressive outbursts told another resident at the nurses’ station, in front of staff and peers, that they should “beat the s**t out of” them after grabbing and discarding an item. In another, a resident with bipolar disorder initiated verbal aggression toward a roommate over room cleanliness, and in separate incidents, roommates reported threatening statements about physical harm or were struck in the forehead after a verbal altercation escalated to physical aggression. Several investigations lacked resident or staff witness statements or detailed incident descriptions, and summaries often stated that residents remained at baseline and that abuse or neglect was ruled out. Across all of these events, the incident logs and investigation folders contained no documentation that the alleged incidents or investigation results were reported to the State Survey Agency, despite multiple staff, including nursing assistants, LPNs, the Resident Care Manager, Social Services Director, DNS, Regional Director, and Administrator, acknowledging in interviews that resident-to-resident altercations could constitute potential abuse and that staff were mandatory reporters who were expected to identify and report such allegations. The surveyors concluded that these failures to identify and report multiple resident-to-resident altercations and a resident accident/injury as potential abuse or neglect, and to report the allegations and investigation results to the State Survey Agency as required, placed residents at risk for potential continued abuse, possible safety concerns due to inadequate follow-up, and diminished quality of life.
Penalty
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