Failure to Provide Medically-Related Social Services for Resident With Ongoing Sexually Inappropriate Behaviors
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide medically-related social services to help a resident attain or maintain the highest practicable physical, mental, and psychosocial well-being, despite ongoing sexually inappropriate behaviors and evolving mental health diagnoses. The resident was admitted with dementia and had a severely impaired BIMS score and a PHQ-9 indicating moderate depressive symptoms. Over several months, nursing staff, a psychiatric NP, and a psychologist repeatedly documented sexually inappropriate behaviors, including grabbing at staff, making sexual comments, exposing himself, and focusing conversations on obtaining access to women. These behaviors were described as chronic, inadequately controlled, and resistant to redirection, with poor impulse control, impaired judgment, and limited insight. The facility’s own policy required provision of medically-related social services, including mental and psychosocial counseling, individualized non-pharmacological approaches, and care planning to address identified needs. Despite multiple nursing and psychiatric notes describing ongoing sexual disinhibition and aggression, the facility did not consistently translate these observations into targeted behavioral monitoring or care plan revisions. The treatment administration records (TARs) for October through March documented no targeted behaviors, even though progress notes during those same months described frequent sexually inappropriate conduct and staff discomfort. An intervention of “cares in pairs” was added to the comprehensive care plan in October, but interviewed staff were unaware it was to be implemented, and it was not listed on the Kardex. Psychiatric providers repeatedly recommended close behavioral monitoring, staff redirection, safety precautions, and supervision, but these recommendations were not further assessed or incorporated into the resident’s care plan until after a resident-to-resident sexual incident occurred in the dining room. The facility also failed to complete timely assessments and coordination related to the resident’s mental health status and sexual behaviors. Although the resident’s diagnoses expanded to include an Unspecified Mood Affective Disorder and later an Adjustment Disorder with Depressed Mood, and psychotropic medications were initiated and adjusted, the facility did not initiate the PASARR process or notify the state authority of these significant changes in mental illness diagnoses and treatments. Additionally, no assessment of the resident’s capacity to consent to sexual activity was completed prior to the resident’s repeated sexually focused interactions and the eventual sexual incident with a peer, despite ongoing documentation of sexual behavior and the resident’s severely impaired decision-making skills. The Assessment of Resident Capacity to Consent to Sexual Activity was only completed after the incident, at which time the resident was found unable to answer the assessment questions. The Social Services Director reported discomfort with conducting such assessments, acknowledged not reviewing psychiatric notes for care plan revisions, and was unaware of their role in the PASARR process, further evidencing the lack of medically-related social services to address the resident’s identified needs. The deficiency culminated in an alleged sexual interaction between this resident and another resident during a meal in the dining room, where staff observed the peer’s hand moving in an up-and-down motion near the resident’s lap and the resident adjusting his pants and pushing his penis into his pants. The facility’s own misconduct incident summary noted that the resident had a history of sexually inappropriate behaviors toward female staff that had shifted focus to female residents. This incident occurred in a public area with other residents present, and it followed months of documented sexually inappropriate behaviors and professional recommendations for supervision and monitoring that had not been fully assessed or integrated into the resident’s care planning and social services interventions. The facility’s policies on Social Services and Resident Assessment-Coordination with PASARR required the Social Services Director to pursue medically-related social services, monitor residents’ psychosocial functioning, and track PASARR status and referrals. However, the Social Services Director stated they did not review psychiatric recommendations for care planning and did not participate in PASARR processing or know who completed new Level I PASARR screenings when mental health diagnoses and medications changed. This disconnect between policy and practice contributed to the failure to provide appropriate medically-related social services, behavioral monitoring, and assessment of capacity to consent, leading to the identified deficiency.
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