Failure to Protect Resident From Verbal Abuse and Investigate Resident-to-Resident Altercation
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to protect a resident from verbal abuse by another resident and to investigate and document a resident-to-resident altercation associated with a fall. Facility policy states that residents have the right to be free from abuse, including verbal abuse, and that suspected abuse incidents must be documented and reported to the Administrator within specified time frames, with an immediate investigation and written findings. The policy copy provided to the surveyor contained blanks where required reporting time frames should have been specified. The State Operations Manual Appendix PP requires facilities to treat resident-to-resident altercations as potential abuse, investigate all incidents, assess residents for injuries, develop care plans to prevent recurrence, and report incidents. One resident (R11), admitted with diagnoses including alcohol abuse with intoxication, atrial fibrillation, COPD, and sepsis, had an MDS showing clear speech, moderate cognitive impairment (BIMS 12/15), and no documented behaviors. R11’s care plan, initiated in February and last revised in March, contained no behavior or resident-to-resident altercation interventions. Another resident (R12), admitted with age-related cognitive decline, bladder cancer, type 2 diabetes, prosthetic heart valve, and chronic kidney disease, had an MDS showing clear speech, moderate cognitive impairment (BIMS 8/15), and no documented behaviors, but the care plan identified potential for physical aggression related to poor impulse control and directed staff to analyze triggers and intervene early when the resident became agitated. On the date of the incident, staff reported that R11 was heard yelling at R12 in the dining room, telling him to “shut up” and threatening that if he did not shut up, R11 would help him shut up. During this time, R12 experienced a fall in the dining room that was not witnessed. Multiple staff interviews confirmed awareness of the yelling and altercation but revealed a lack of documentation and formal investigation. A CNA reported hearing R11 yell threatening statements at R12 and stated that R12 fell while R11 was yelling, but there was no documentation in either resident’s medical record about the altercation. The LPN on duty stated that everyone heard the residents yelling, that she was told about the fall, and that staff discussed hearing them yell at each other, but she did not recall the exact words and was unaware of any care-planned interventions to monitor or separate the residents. The Social Services Director acknowledged hearing about the incident, stated that R12 can be loud and repetitive and that R11 gets irritated and yells at him to shut up, and confirmed that the fall was documented on the same date as the yelling. The DON recalled being aware that the residents were yelling and that R12 fell that day, but there was no contemporaneous investigation of the verbal altercation as potential abuse. The Administrator stated that he only completes written investigations if an incident is reportable, did not conduct a formal investigation of the yelling incident, had no documentation of what was said, and acknowledged that staff heard the altercation in the dining room. Review of the fall report showed no mention of the yelling or altercation, and there was no evidence of an abuse investigation or care plan revisions related to the resident-to-resident verbal abuse. Title: Failure to Protect Resident From Verbal Abuse and Investigate Resident-to-Resident Altercation ShortSummary: Two moderately cognitively impaired residents with multiple comorbidities, including alcohol abuse, COPD, age-related cognitive decline, and cancer, were involved in a dining room incident where one resident loudly yelled at and threatened the other to “shut up,” during which the threatened resident experienced an unwitnessed fall. Staff, including a CNA, an LPN, the SSD, the DON, and the NHA, acknowledged awareness of the yelling and the fall, but there was no documentation in either resident’s record of the altercation, no formal abuse investigation, and no behavior or separation interventions care planned for the resident making threats, despite facility policies requiring prompt reporting, documentation, and investigation of suspected abuse and federal guidance treating resident-to-resident altercations as potential abuse.
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