Failure to Implement Care-Planned 1:1 Supervision for Resident With Intrusive Sexual Behaviors
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to implement a care-planned intervention for one-to-one (1:1) supervision for a resident with severe cognitive impairment and intrusive sexualized behaviors. The resident, diagnosed with metabolic encephalopathy and schizophrenia, had an MDS dated 1/29/2026 indicating severe cognitive impairment and a need for supervision or touch assistance for eating, personal hygiene, and walking outside her room. On 1/1/2026, a Change of Condition (COC) assessment and progress note documented that she was entering other residents’ rooms, approaching male residents, caressing their faces, attempting to kiss them, and asking them to have sexual intercourse. On 1/2/2026, she was again observed entering a male resident’s room and continued to approach him despite his repeated requests for her to leave, and staff had to redirect her as she continued to wander for another hour. On 1/3/2026, a progress note documented that she made inappropriate verbal comments to other residents and needed reminders about appropriate boundaries. On 3/29/2026, a COC assessment documented that the same resident touched another resident while that resident was in bed and was redirected by staff. This COC assessment specifically indicated that she required 1:1 supervision to ensure the safety of other residents and prevent further intrusive behavior. A care plan titled “Risk for Injury to Others related to intrusive behavior,” dated 3/29/2026, directed nursing staff to initiate one-on-one supervision as indicated to ensure resident safety and prevent intrusive contact with other residents, and to provide close supervision when she was near other residents or in shared areas. Despite these documented behaviors and the explicit care plan interventions, staffing documents for 3/30/2026, 3/31/2026, and 4/1/2026 did not show that she was on 1:1 monitoring. On 4/2/2026, a COC assessment recorded that the resident was in the hallway near the kitchen with another resident who was cognitively intact, had generalized muscle weakness, difficulty walking, and depression, and required supervision or touch assistance for wheelchair mobility. During this encounter, the second resident reported that the first resident approached him while he was sitting in his wheelchair and touched his genitals without his permission, leading him to grab her wrist to move her hand away. Certified Nursing Assistants interviewed stated that the first resident had a known history of touching others and wandering into other residents’ rooms, that many residents had problems with her behavior, and that she had wandered into the second resident’s room multiple times in the days before the hallway incident, causing him to yell at her to leave. Both CNAs confirmed that she was not on 1:1 supervision at the time of these events or at the time of the altercation, and the DON acknowledged that the care plan required 1:1 monitoring and that he did not know why it was not implemented, despite the facility’s policy requiring staff to ensure implementation of individualized safety and supervision interventions.
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