Involuntary Seclusion of Residents Without Proper Documentation
Summary
The facility failed to ensure that residents were free from involuntary seclusion, affecting six residents who were placed in a secure unit without proper documentation or physician orders. These residents, identified as having various cognitive impairments and other medical conditions, were placed in the secure unit without documented clinical criteria or consent from their physicians or interdisciplinary team. The lack of physician orders and updates to care plans for these residents indicates a significant oversight in the facility's procedures for managing resident placement in secure units. Observations and interviews revealed that residents were not provided with the access code to freely enter or exit the secure unit, effectively confining them without their consent. Interviews with residents and their representatives indicated that some residents were placed in the secure unit for reasons unrelated to clinical necessity, such as the desire for a private room or specific nursing care. Despite these preferences, there was no formal documentation or consent process in place to justify their placement in the secure unit, raising concerns about the residents' autonomy and freedom. Interviews with facility staff, including the Administrator and DON, highlighted a lack of policy and procedure for admitting residents to the secure unit. The staff acknowledged that most residents in the secure unit were placed there due to wandering tendencies or elopement risks, yet there was no evidence of such behaviors in the residents' progress notes. The absence of a structured process for secure unit placement and the failure to involve residents and their representatives in decision-making processes contributed to the deficiency identified in the report.
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