Failure to Prevent Resident-to-Resident Physical Abuse and Inadequate Response to Resulting Injury
Penalty
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to protect a cognitively impaired resident from physical abuse by another resident with known aggressive behaviors and to provide adequate supervision to prevent such abuse. One resident with severe dementia and a documented history of delusions, physical and verbal behaviors, rejection of care, wandering, and physical aggression toward others was care planned for multiple behavioral symptoms, including hitting, kicking, pushing, grabbing, and entering other residents’ rooms. Interventions in the plan of care included medication management, calm approaches, communication before care, leaving and returning if the resident resisted care, observing and documenting inappropriate behaviors, notifying the practitioner when behaviors persisted, providing psychological/psychiatric services as needed, offering choices, and providing a calm, safe environment and structured daily schedule. Despite this, the resident with aggressive behaviors was in a common area where another severely cognitively impaired resident was present. On the date of the incident, a CNA reported hearing yelling in a common area and then observed the aggressive resident strike another resident in the left side of the chest. The CNA immediately intervened and separated the residents. The nurse assessed the resident who was struck and initially found no redness or bruising, with stable vital signs. The resident reported that it hurt and did not know why the other resident had hit her. Over the following days, the resident continued to complain of left chest and breast pain, with pain scores documented as high as 9–10 out of 10. Multiple assessments and diagnostic tests were performed, including chest x‑rays and pain assessments, and the resident was repeatedly administered acetaminophen and topical agents for pain. Notes documented ongoing pain, intermittent anxiety, and discoloration to the left chest. The resident’s pain and chest symptoms persisted, leading to additional diagnostic workup including a STAT chest x‑ray, EKG, troponin level, and eventually transfer to the emergency room after family involvement and insistence on hospital evaluation. In the ER, imaging identified findings including an abdominal aortic dissection and other abnormalities, and the family reported that the ER physician questioned whether the injury pattern could be related to trauma. The family member also reported that the resident had slight discoloration to the chest from being hit and that the hospital took photographs. The DON later stated that the facility did not complete a self‑reported incident to the state agency regarding the altercation between the two residents because the resident was considered not injured. The facility’s abuse policy defined physical abuse to include hitting and punching and required reporting alleged violations to the state agency within specified timeframes, including immediately but not later than two hours after an allegation involving abuse or resulting in serious bodily injury. Despite this policy and the known aggressive behaviors of the resident who struck the other resident, the facility did not self‑report the incident.
