Failure to Prevent Repeated Resident‑to‑Resident Physical Abuse
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to protect multiple residents from physical abuse by other residents, despite known psychiatric and behavioral histories. One incident occurred when a cognitively intact resident with schizophrenia and a history of aggressive behavior was mistakenly given another resident’s jeans. After the resident attempted to sell the jeans, the rightful owner, who also had multiple serious psychiatric diagnoses and a history of psychosis and combative behavior, confronted the resident. Staff observed the verbal escalation during shift change but did not separate the residents before the argument became physical. The confrontation escalated into both residents punching each other, and one resident produced broken scissors and stabbed the other in the forearm, resulting in a stab wound requiring staples and hospital treatment. Another incident involved a cognitively intact resident with schizophrenia and documented physical behaviors toward others one to three days per week. This resident engaged in a physical altercation with another cognitively intact resident diagnosed with schizoaffective and antisocial personality disorders. Staff and documentation indicated that one resident struck the other in the eye, causing a fall against a wall, followed by the aggressor banging the victim’s head on the floor. The victim developed a visible hematoma above the right eye with redness and irritation. Although EMS was activated, the injured resident repeatedly refused treatment and nursing assessments. The facility’s investigation substantiated this as abuse, citing exposure to an aggressive resident and the resulting head injury. Additional resident‑to‑resident altercations occurred in various contexts, including disputes over money and personal items, and reactions to other residents’ behaviors. In one case, a cognitively intact resident with multiple psychiatric diagnoses struck another cognitively intact resident with schizophrenia and TBI during a banking/activity interaction after a verbal disagreement about a $5 debt for shoes, causing an abrasion behind the ear. In another event, a resident with paranoid schizophrenia who exhibited daily physical and verbal behaviors dismantled an air conditioner skirt and swung it toward staff; another cognitively intact resident with schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorder then grabbed this resident and slammed them to the floor, causing a head injury that required hospital evaluation. Other incidents included a cognitively intact resident hitting another resident after a verbal altercation involving thrown ice and chairs, and a resident with schizoaffective disorder striking and scratching a cognitively intact resident with multiple psychiatric diagnoses in the dining area, resulting in a swollen, lacerated lip, scalp scratches, and reported fear of the aggressor. Across these events, staff either arrived after physical contact had already occurred or did not intervene in time to prevent physical abuse between residents. The facility’s own records and interviews show that staff were aware of residents’ significant psychiatric histories, behavioral patterns, and prior aggression, yet resident‑to‑resident altercations repeatedly escalated to physical abuse causing injuries such as stab wounds, hematomas, abrasions, and lacerations. In several cases, staff heard arguments or saw verbal escalation but did not promptly separate residents or call the facility’s behavioral emergency code before physical violence occurred. The Administrator acknowledged that once staff hear raised voices, they should move toward the source and determine if residents are escalating and, if so, call a Code immediately. The pattern of incidents from multiple dates, involving different residents and locations within the facility, demonstrates a failure to consistently implement the facility’s abuse and neglect policy to prevent physical abuse between residents. The survey identified these failures as an Immediate Jeopardy situation beginning on 3/23/26, based on the repeated resident‑to‑resident physical abuse incidents and the facility’s inability to prevent them. The facility’s own investigations repeatedly substantiated these events as abuse, noting preventable circumstances such as mishandled property, failure to remove escalating residents from shared areas, and delayed staff intervention despite observable verbal conflicts. The deficiency was ultimately cited at a lowered severity level after onsite verification that corrective actions had been implemented, but the documented events themselves reflect the underlying failure to protect residents from physical abuse by other residents during the period reviewed.
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