Failure to Timely Care Plan for Resident Elopement Risk
Penalty
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to timely develop and implement a comprehensive, measurable care plan addressing elopement risk for a resident identified as being at risk for wandering and elopement. The resident was admitted with multiple diagnoses including anxiety, chronic kidney disease, type 2 diabetes, cognitive communication deficit, Parkinson’s disease, and dementia without behavioral disturbance, and had a legal guardian. An initial wander-risk evaluation in late 2025 identified the resident as low risk for wandering, and an annual MDS assessment documented that the resident was cognitively intact, did not wander, and required partial to moderate assistance with ambulation using a wheelchair. A subsequent wander-risk evaluation in early 2026, completed by an LPN, showed the resident had progressed to a moderate risk for wandering, but the section of the form asking what interventions would be care planned was left blank. A discharge, return-anticipated MDS again documented that the resident did not wander and required partial to moderate assistance with ambulation. A later wander-risk evaluation in mid-February 2026, completed by an MDS/RN, identified the resident as high risk for wandering, and again the section for care plan interventions was left blank. On the same date, a progress note documented that the resident pushed on an exit door, activated the door alarm, and was found on his right side outside the emergency exit door with his wheelchair beside him after an unwitnessed fall; he was assessed and brought back to the nursing station for closer monitoring. A facility investigation confirmed that the resident had exited through an emergency exit door on a hall under construction and had been outside for less than five minutes, with alarms and egress doors functioning and staff responding immediately. Interviews with the LPN and MDS/RN revealed that nurses completed wander-risk assessments and the MDS/RN handled care planning, that the LPN had never completed the care plan intervention section of the wander-risk tool, and that the MDS/RN did not initiate an elopement risk care plan when the resident’s risk level increased from low to moderate because the IDT believed the resident was not an elopement risk. The Administrator and DON confirmed that a care plan should have been initiated when the resident began self-propelling around the facility and that this was not done until after the elopement event, despite facility policy stating that assessments are ongoing and care plans are revised as resident conditions change.
