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F0689
J

Failure to Perform 15‑Minute Safety Checks Allows Elopement Through Window and Roof

Salisbury, Missouri Survey Completed on 03-12-2026

Penalty

No penalty information released
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The penalty, as released by CMS, applies to the entire inspection this citation is part of, covering all citations and f-tags issued, not just this specific f-tag. For the complete original report, please refer to the 'Details' section.

Summary

The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide protective oversight and complete ordered 15‑minute safety checks for a known elopement‑risk resident, resulting in an undetected elopement through the resident’s room window. The resident had multiple psychiatric and behavioral diagnoses, including schizoaffective disorder, psychoactive substance abuse, suicidal ideations, mood disorder, ADHD, opioid abuse, anxiety disorder, and insomnia due to another mental disorder. The resident’s PASRR and care plan documented a long history of mental health issues, substance use, homelessness, prior overdoses, abuse history, and a need for ongoing psychiatric care, low‑stimulation environment, consistent routines, and environmental supports to prevent elopement. Facility assessments, including elopement risk evaluations, identified the resident as at risk for elopement, with a documented history of elopement from prior secured facilities and from home, as well as prior elopement from this facility shortly after admission. The facility’s own elopement and intensive monitoring policies required systematic identification and monitoring of residents at risk for elopement, including intensive monitoring and 15‑minute checks for residents with poor impulse control or elopement ideation. The resident’s elopement risk evaluation showed an increasing risk score over time, and nursing notes documented the resident’s agitation, drug‑seeking behavior, difficulty with redirection, and multiple attempts to get out the door. Staff documented that the resident was on intensive monitoring with every 15‑minute face checks, and the care plan called for completion of elopement risk assessments and face checks/intensive monitoring. On the day of the incident, staff recognized that the resident was “spiraling,” irritated, and had verbalized intent to run away and had attempted to open a door earlier in the day. Despite this, the 15‑minute checks were not consistently or timely completed as ordered, and staff responsible for the checks acknowledged being behind on face checks due to a busy day and documenting checks when they had time rather than at the required intervals. During the period when the resident was supposed to be under 15‑minute face checks, the resident used a metal watch band to loosen and remove the screws from a rubber security block in the windowsill, slid open the side window, pushed out the screen, and exited into a fenced courtyard. The resident reported that it took about an hour to remove the block and open the window and that he closed the curtain when staff entered the room so they would not notice his actions. Staff performing checks reported that they completed face checks by opening the door and seeing if the resident was in the room, without observing what the resident was doing. After exiting into the courtyard, the resident moved a picnic table next to the building, stood on it, climbed onto the roof, crossed the roof, jumped down into an open area outside the fenced courtyard, and walked several blocks down city streets. Facility staff were unaware the resident had eloped until an off‑duty employee saw the resident walking in pajamas and a coat and notified the facility, and a police officer subsequently made contact with the resident, who admitted leaving the facility through the window and walking away.

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