Failure to Thoroughly Investigate Bruising and Resident-to-Resident Verbal Altercations
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to thoroughly investigate an injury during handling for one resident and multiple resident-to-resident verbal altercations involving two residents. Washington State Reporting Guidelines for Nursing Homes require a thorough investigation that systematically collects and reviews evidence to identify who was involved and what, when, where, why, and how an incident occurred, including the probable cause. For Resident 1, who had dementia, depression, cirrhosis, required two-person assistance with ADLs, and was on hospice with fragile skin, bruising was identified in the pelvic/groin area. Documentation on the date of discovery showed inconsistent and incomplete descriptions of the bruising, including references to bruises above the vaginal area, in the right groin, and red/purple marks to the pubic bone area, without clear documentation of color, size, or number of bruises in the skin integrity update. A nurse practitioner later documented that mild bruising to the external vaginal labia was reported and concluded it occurred during peri-care by the prior shift. The facility’s investigation into the bruising incident for Resident 1 was incomplete. The investigation document stated that the bruising occurred during peri-care and that there were no concerns of abuse, and abuse/neglect were ruled out as the bruising was attributed to staff wiping too hard. However, the investigation did not include statements from staff who provided care prior to the identification of the bruising, nor did it include observations of peri-care to rule out abuse or neglect. The administrator later stated they interviewed one nursing assistant from the evening shift but did not document the interview and did not obtain statements from all staff who had provided care before the bruising was found. The DON acknowledged there was no documentation that peri-care observations or hands-on education were completed, and verbal competencies for reporting skin issues were not documented. Additionally, there was no physician order to monitor the bruising, no monitoring on the Treatment Administration Record, and the bruising was not added to the care plan, despite facility staff stating that identified skin issues should be placed on alert charting and care plans updated. The deficiency also includes the facility’s failure to investigate and monitor resident-to-resident verbal altercations involving Resident 1 and Resident 2. Progress notes documented that Resident 1 and Resident 2 engaged in verbal fighting and name-calling on multiple occasions, with staff needing to intervene and remind them to be respectful. One note described Resident 1 calling the roommate names and another described Resident 2 answering back to insults from the roommate. Staff, including an LPN and the nurse manager, acknowledged that residents yelling and calling names at another resident would be considered resident-to-resident altercations that should trigger separation of residents, initiation of an investigation, and placement on alert charting. Despite this, there were no investigations completed for these altercations, no alert charting for either resident, and no care plan interventions addressing the verbal altercations prior to the eventual room change for Resident 1. Resident 2 reported that the other resident called them names such as “stupid” and questioned their gender, and stated that staff were aware of these behaviors and did not do anything to stop them. Facility leadership reviewed the records and acknowledged that the documented events were resident-to-resident verbal altercations for which investigations and interventions were not completed. These failures, as stated in the report, prevented the facility from identifying the potential causes and contributing factors of the occurrences and placed residents at risk for unidentified abuse or neglect, risk for injury, and unmet care needs.
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