Repeated Elopements Due to Disabled Alarms and Inadequate Supervision on Secured Unit
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide adequate supervision and maintain a hazard‑free, secure environment for a cognitively impaired resident on a secured unit, resulting in two elopements. The resident was an adult male with non‑Alzheimer’s dementia, neurocognitive disorder, severe cognitive impairment (BIMS score of 7), and a history of wandering per admission clinicals. His MDS showed he ambulated independently and required moderate assistance with most ADLs. His care plan, revised 04/22/26, identified cognitive loss and exit‑seeking behaviors, with interventions such as redirection and moving him closer to the nurses’ station for monitoring. Despite this, the resident told staff he had been trying to get out of the door every day for 20 days, indicating ongoing exit‑seeking that was not effectively addressed. On the first elopement, at approximately 2:00 a.m. on 04/20/26, the resident was discovered missing from his room and a Code Green was activated. A floor technician reported seeing a man in a gray hoodie exiting the back door around that time. The technician stated the exit door alarm, which should have sounded when opened, had been turned off by someone so staff could go out for breaks without disturbing the facility or getting locked out. Instead of intervening or following the individual he saw leaving, the technician went to inform an aide, and by the time staff searched outside, the resident could not be located. Law enforcement later found and returned the resident around 4:30 a.m. The resident subsequently stated he had been trying the door daily and finally found it unlocked, and that he had walked for 2–3 hours looking for public transportation before encountering officers. Following the first elopement, the resident’s elopement assessment on 04/20/26 scored him as low risk (score 10) with no mental or behavioral issues documented, despite his dementia, history of wandering, and expressed exit‑seeking. The DON later stated that residents with exit‑seeking behaviors were to be placed on 15‑minute checks for 72 hours and, if unresolved, on one‑to‑one supervision until reassessment and psych clearance; however, there was no evidence provided of 15‑minute checks for this resident, and he was not placed on one‑to‑one supervision. On the second elopement, during the overnight shift of 04/23–04/24, staff last observed the resident near the nurses’ station around 12:30 a.m., awake, eating snacks, writing, and later napping on a couch. Around 1:30 a.m., he was found missing, and staff discovered that a window in his previous room was open with part of the window alarm removed and the brackets that should have limited the window opening to 6 inches broken off. Staff reported that the alarm on that window had been removed, so no alert sounded when it was opened. The resident eloped through this unsecured window without staff noticing and was later found at a hospital under another name, being treated for chest pain. These events demonstrate that exit doors and windows were not consistently secured or alarmed as required, and that staff supervision and monitoring interventions were not effectively implemented for a known exit‑seeking, cognitively impaired resident on a secured unit. The facility’s own elopement policy required that alarms and security measures function properly, that residents at risk for elopement be appropriately assessed and care planned, and that staff respond immediately when a resident is missing. In this case, the exit door alarm had been turned off, the window alarm and safety brackets were broken or removed, and the resident’s elopement risk assessment did not reflect his documented history of wandering and exit‑seeking. Staff interviews confirmed that the floor technician did not follow the resident when he saw someone leaving through the back door, and that staff were unaware of the disabled window alarm until after the second elopement. The combination of disabled or nonfunctional alarms, unsecured egress points, and inadequate implementation of monitoring interventions for a resident with dementia and exit‑seeking behaviors led directly to the two elopement incidents that formed the basis of the deficiency.
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