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F0609
D

Failure to Immediately Report Resident’s Allegations of Rough Care and Possible Abuse

Vidor, Texas Survey Completed on 03-31-2026

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 ensure that all alleged violations involving abuse, neglect, exploitation, mistreatment, injuries of unknown origin, or misappropriation of resident property were reported immediately, and no later than two hours after the allegation was made, to the administrator and appropriate state officials. One resident with metabolic encephalopathy, Alzheimer’s dementia, anxiety, multiple vertebral compression fractures, pain, and bipolar disorder, who was cognitively intact per a BIMS score of 14, alleged that two CNAs were rough during a bed bath, twisted her leg, and jumped on her bed and legs. The resident’s care plan noted impaired cognitive function/dementia and later documented verbal behavior symptoms directed toward others, including allegations that staff attacked her, followed by expressions of affection for the same staff. The facility’s investigation identified the incident date as early in the month when two CNAs provided a bed bath, and the facility documented that it did not become aware of the allegation until later in the month, at which time the allegation was reported to the state. According to staff interviews and statements, the resident first voiced concerns about rough care on a date several days after the bed bath, when a medication aide (MA A) reported that the resident said a CNA was rough with her. MA A stated she told the resident she did not think the CNA would be rough, then continued passing medications and did not immediately report the allegation to the administrator or clearly to the charge nurse, DON, ADON, or other leadership, despite acknowledging that rough treatment could constitute abuse and that such allegations were to be reported immediately. Multiple nurses (LVN F, LVN G, and the ADON) stated that MA A did not report this allegation to them on that date, and each indicated that they would have reported any such allegation to the administrator immediately. The facility’s abuse protocol required any person observing or suspecting abuse to immediately report to the charge nurse, who must then immediately examine the patient and notify the Abuse Prevention Coordinator. Several days later, the resident again reported to another medication aide (MA E) that a CNA and another aide were rough during care and that her legs hurt because the aides were jumping up and down on her legs. MA E acknowledged that she did not report this allegation directly and immediately to the LVN or administrator, but instead informed the implicated CNA, who then reported the allegation to the LVN on duty (LVN D). LVN D stated that upon being informed by the CNA, she attempted to contact the administrator and then informed the ADON. The administrator reported that she first became aware of the allegation at approximately 4:40 p.m. on that later date, and the facility’s investigation form reflected that the incident had occurred many days earlier. Staff interviews and time card reviews confirmed the dates the CNAs worked and the timing of the bath relative to the resident’s subsequent complaints. The failure of MA A and MA E to follow the facility’s abuse protocol and immediately report the resident’s allegations to the charge nurse and administrator resulted in a delay in the facility’s awareness and reporting of the alleged abuse. In their statements, the CNAs involved (CNA B and CNA C) described providing a routine bed bath to the resident, noting that she complained of being wet and cold but did not complain of pain during the bath, and they denied hurting her or jumping on her bed or legs. They also stated that they were not informed of any complaint until many days after the bath. The resident, when interviewed later, reiterated that the aides were rough, twisted her leg, and jumped on the bed, and said she did not want them providing her care, although she could not recall the exact date or which staff member she initially told. The administrator, LVN D, CNAs, and medication aides all acknowledged in interviews that rough treatment could be considered abuse and that allegations of abuse must be reported immediately. Despite this, the facility’s own records and staff accounts showed that the initial allegation made to MA A and the subsequent allegation made to MA E were not promptly reported through the required chain, resulting in the facility not becoming aware of and not reporting the allegation to the state survey agency within the required timeframe.

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