Failure to Supervise Residents With Dementia, Resulting in Altercations and Sexual Contact
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide adequate supervision and prevent resident-to-resident altercations and inappropriate contact on a secured dementia unit. On one unit, surveyors observed two residents yelling at each other in the dining room while an activities aide sat at the table and a nurse and medical records coordinator did not intervene for approximately two minutes. During this time, another resident with severe cognitive impairment and anxiety walked unimpeded across the dining room, poked and shoved the head of a resident seated in a wheelchair, then moved to another resident seated on the far side of the room and, after unintelligible verbalizations and the other resident yelling “go back,” slapped that resident on the arm. Staff only began to approach after these interactions had already escalated. Multiple staff interviews acknowledged that residents on this unit wander, become more aggressive after sundown, and that there is not enough supervision. Record review showed that the resident who initiated the physical contact had diagnoses including unspecified dementia, major depressive disorder, brief psychotic disorder, and severe cognitive impairment (BIMS 00), and was on a secured unit with care plan interventions to cue, orient, and supervise as needed. The resident had a documented history of being the aggressor in a prior resident-to-resident altercation and was considered unstable enough to require psychiatric assessment. The resident who was slapped had diagnoses of unspecified dementia and vascular dementia with agitation, moderate cognitive impairment (BIMS 11), and was also on the secured unit with a care plan indicating the need for assistance with all decision making and supervision as needed. Staff, including CNAs, an RN, and the interim DON, reported that residents wander into each other’s rooms frequently, that activities are insufficient to keep all residents engaged, that staffing is sometimes short, and that there was not enough supervision on the unit. A separate deficiency event involved a resident with severe cognitive impairment and elopement risk who wandered the halls and into other residents’ rooms, and another resident with dementia and documented sexually inappropriate behaviors. Observations showed the cognitively impaired resident wandering near a hall door, attempting to enter a room that was not theirs, and continuing to wander and talk with other residents. The wandering resident’s care plan identified them as an elopement risk/wanderer with interventions such as distraction with structured activities and other diversions. The other resident had diagnoses including Alzheimer’s disease, unspecified dementia, and major depressive disorder, with an MDS indicating severe cognitive impairment and frequent wandering, and a care plan noting that the resident could be sexually inappropriate and should be redirected and provided alternative activities. Interviews with the wandering resident’s family member revealed that another resident repeatedly sought out this resident, attempted to call them into their room, and was later found groping the resident’s breast in that room. Staff, including CNAs and the unit manager LPN, confirmed that the sexually inappropriate resident had previously touched another resident in a similar manner, that the facility was aware of this resident’s sexual behaviors and habit of touching themselves, and that residents routinely wander into each other’s rooms. Staff statements reflected uncertainty about how often residents were checked when not in the dining room, a belief by some that residents entering each other’s rooms was not dangerous, and acknowledgment by others that wandering is dangerous because staff do not know what is happening behind closed doors. The NHA stated that despite a prior similar incident, the sexually inappropriate resident was not viewed as an aggressor and that, although the resident was removed from 1:1 at one point, the facility still should have been monitoring this resident more often than usual rounds. The facility’s abuse and neglect policy defined abuse, neglect, and sexual abuse, and required prevention of abuse and neglect and elimination of ongoing danger to residents, but staff interviews and observed events showed that residents with known behavioral and sexual issues were not consistently supervised to prevent further resident-to-resident contact and altercations.
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