F0744 F744: Provide the appropriate treatment and services to a resident who displays or is diagnosed with dementia.
E

Failure to Implement Person-Centered Dementia Care and Supervision for Wandering Residents

Oakwood Care And RehabilitationLakewood, Colorado Survey Completed on 02-26-2026

Summary

The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide appropriate, person-centered dementia care and supervision for multiple residents with dementia who exhibited wandering and territorial behaviors. Facility policy required individualized care plans, least restrictive approaches, thorough clinical assessment, monitoring of mood and behavior, and staff training in dementia care and behavior management. Despite this, surveyors observed residents with known dementia and wandering tendencies roaming hallways without purpose, entering other residents’ rooms, and intruding into others’ personal space and rooms without consistent staff monitoring or redirection. During group activities, several residents wandered the halls unobserved, and one resident repeatedly attempted to exit locked doors and became frustrated without timely staff intervention. Specific residents with documented dementia, severe cognitive impairment, and care plans addressing wandering and behavioral risks were not managed according to their care plan interventions. One resident with severe cognitive impairment and documented wandering and aggressive behaviors was observed going into other residents’ rooms without staff supervision or redirection, despite care plan directives for early staff-led redirection and immediate intervention when entering others’ rooms. Another resident with dementia and daily documented wandering was seen attempting to exit locked doors and then wandering the unit and trying to exit the front door without staff maintaining line-of-sight supervision, even though the resident had an elopement/wandering care plan. Additional residents with severe cognitive impairment and documented frequent wandering were observed pacing hallways, standing idly, and entering other residents’ rooms without staff monitoring or redirection, contrary to care plan interventions that called for structured activities, reorientation strategies, and redirection. Residents identified as territorial or prone to aggression when others entered their rooms or personal space were also not consistently protected through care-planned interventions. One resident with dementia and a care plan noting potential physical aggression and territoriality, including triggers such as others entering his room or personal space, was not supervised or protected when another resident rested her head on him and touched his head and hand, and when other residents were in close proximity, without staff monitoring or redirection. Another resident with a history of becoming physically aggressive when others wandered into his room had a care-planned intervention for retractable barrier straps across his doorway, but surveyors observed that these straps were not consistently in place, allowing wandering residents to enter his room unimpeded. Staff interviews confirmed that many or all residents on the secure memory unit wandered and entered other residents’ rooms, that staff relied on red barrier straps to deter entry, and that staff did not consistently prevent residents from going into others’ rooms, with some CNAs unaware of where to find care plans or unable to clearly describe non-restrictive behavior management approaches. The record reviews further showed a pattern of frequent wandering documented in daily activity tracking for many of these residents, including those whose MDS assessments did not always reflect wandering behaviors, while care plans for elopement and wandering called for identifying patterns, determining purpose of wandering, and providing structured activities and redirection. Despite these documented needs and interventions, surveyor observations over multiple days showed residents repeatedly wandering aimlessly, entering occupied and unoccupied rooms, and intruding on others’ privacy without consistent staff intervention. This mismatch between assessed needs, written care plans, and actual staff practices led to residents with dementia not receiving the individualized, person-centered dementia management and supervision necessary to maintain their highest practicable physical, mental, and psychosocial well-being, particularly in relation to wandering, room entry, and resident-to-resident interactions. Staff interviews corroborated that wandering and room entry by residents were common and difficult to manage, and that staff did not always know or follow care-planned interventions. One CNA acknowledged that residents frequently wandered into others’ rooms and that barrier straps were used only after complaints, while another CNA admitted not knowing where care plans were located. An LPN stated that all residents wandered, especially one younger resident, and that staff only redirected residents when they saw them enter rooms that were not theirs, which conflicted with observations showing a lack of consistent redirection. Another LPN stated that residents could not be stopped from going into other residents’ rooms and that redirection was difficult, underscoring the facility’s failure to implement effective, person-centered dementia management strategies as outlined in its own policy and residents’ care plans.

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.

Resources

Below are regulatory guidelines relevant to this citation:

See other F0744 citations
Failure to Implement Care-Planned Behavioral Interventions for Dementia-Related Episode
D
F0744 F744: Provide the appropriate treatment and services to a resident who displays or is diagnosed with dementia.
Short Summary

A resident with dementia, psychosis, and a history of aggressive behaviors had a care plan calling for calm approaches, redirection, re-approach after de-escalation, non-judgmental support, and other non-pharmacological interventions. During a behavioral episode in which the resident entered another resident’s room and both began hitting each other, staff separated them and physically controlled the resident by "arm to arming" him to a chair near the nurses’ station, repeating this when he tried to get up and became argumentative. Documentation did not describe specific de-escalation or non-pharmacological measures used, and staff reported limited, mostly computer-based training on managing aggressive behaviors. The physician later indicated the resident’s behaviors were instigated by staff and that forceful handling could provoke retaliatory responses, while the facility’s behavior management policy required individualized, non-pharmacological strategies before or alongside psychotropic medication use. This resulted in a deficiency for not providing appropriate behavioral interventions consistent with the resident’s care plan.

No penalty information released
tooltip icon
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.
Missing Dementia Care Plan and Behavior Monitoring
D
F0744 F744: Provide the appropriate treatment and services to a resident who displays or is diagnosed with dementia.
Short Summary

A resident with Alzheimer's Dementia, chronic pain, and diabetes was rarely or never understood, had short-term memory problems, made poor decisions, and needed extensive ADL assistance. The EHR showed no care plan for the dementia diagnosis and no behavior monitoring on the MAR, and an RCM/LPN stated they could not locate a dementia care plan for the resident.

No penalty information released
tooltip icon
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.
Failure to Provide Individualized Dementia Care, Activities, and Supervision on Memory Unit
E
F0744 F744: Provide the appropriate treatment and services to a resident who displays or is diagnosed with dementia.
Short Summary

The facility failed to provide individualized dementia-focused treatment, activities, and supervision for several cognitively impaired residents on a memory unit. Care plans did not identify residents’ activity preferences or specify meaningful, personalized activities despite documented dementia, behaviors, and need for assistance. Observations showed residents sitting idle, wandering aimlessly, entering cupboards and rooms, yelling out, and one resident repeatedly exposing herself, while an activity aide only played music or passed donuts and drinks without engaging residents in structured activities. Nursing notes documented frequent falls related to self-transfers, physical altercations, feces smearing, and ongoing intimate contact between two residents despite a family member’s explicit request that they be kept apart. Staff interviews revealed that there had been no consistent activities on the unit, residents were largely unsupervised while staff performed care and med passes, and staffing levels were below required ratios, leaving only two aides for about 30 residents. The deficiency was cited under state regulations for resident care planning and nursing services.

No penalty information released
tooltip icon
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.
Failure to Provide Person-Centered Dementia Care and Services
D
F0744 F744: Provide the appropriate treatment and services to a resident who displays or is diagnosed with dementia.
Short Summary

Failure to provide person-centered dementia care and services: A resident with severe dementia, anxiety, and diabetes was repeatedly observed calling out for help while lying or sitting in a hospital gown with poor grooming and minimal stimulation in her room. Staff described her as easily overstimulated, needing one-on-one attention, and having worsening confusion and refusals of care, yet her activity plans were conflicting and did not include her known preferences such as classical music, the Beatles, quiet settings, or individualized sensory interventions. Records also showed no recent activity participation, and staff stated no dementia-specific interventions were in place beyond routine activities.

No penalty information released
tooltip icon
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.
Failure to Redirect Resident with Dementia from Another Resident’s Bed
D
F0744 F744: Provide the appropriate treatment and services to a resident who displays or is diagnosed with dementia.
Short Summary

A resident with dementia and a history of intrusive wandering and agitation was found lying in another resident’s bed despite care plans directing staff to redirect her to her own room or a quiet area. A laundry aide identified the room but did not redirect the resident or notify nursing staff, and an MCSS initially looked into the room and left before being informed the resident was still there. The other resident became visibly upset and stated the resident did not belong in the room.

No penalty information released
tooltip icon
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.
Failure to Accurately Assess Dementia-Related Elopement Risk Leading to Resident Elopement
D
F0744 F744: Provide the appropriate treatment and services to a resident who displays or is diagnosed with dementia.
Short Summary

A resident with dementia, bipolar disorder, impaired cognition, and a documented history of exit-seeking behaviors was not accurately identified as an elopement risk on the facility’s Wander/Elopement Risk Evaluation, which failed to list dementia or other decision-making impairments and concluded there was no elopement risk. Despite care plan directives to assess elopement risk and facility policies requiring identification of residents at risk for unsafe wandering or elopement, staff, including an LVN, did not recognize or document the resident’s dementia diagnosis on the risk tool. Subsequently, the resident, who used a wheelchair independently and had been awake and moving in the hallway overnight, self-propelled past a nearby housekeeper and exited through an unlocked front door, and was later discovered missing during rounds, prompting a facility search and police notification.

No penalty information released
tooltip icon
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.

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