Failure to Maintain Safe, Clutter‑Free Room and Control Bedside Medications and Cigarettes
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure a safe, clean, comfortable, and clutter‑free room environment for one resident, as well as failure to control access to medications and cigarettes in that resident’s room. The resident had a history of bilateral spinal stenosis, PTSD, repeated falls, lower back pain, tobacco use, and chronic pain syndrome, and was assessed as having intact cognition and capacity to make medical decisions. The resident required supervision or partial/moderate assistance with multiple ADLs, including toileting, bathing, and dressing. The care plan documented that the resident kept personal belongings on the floor, around the bed, and on top of the bed, refused to have staff clean and declutter the room, and was at risk for falls due to clutter. Interventions in the care plan included assisting the resident with keeping the area clean and clutter‑free, creating a regular cleaning schedule, encouraging the resident to participate in sorting/discarding items, and offering alternative measures to keep personal items in safe areas. Despite these identified risks and planned interventions, observations on the survey date showed the resident’s room remained full of clutter on and alongside the bed. Bags of clothes and other items were piled against the wall and bed on one side, blocking access to that side of the bed. On the other side and on top of the bed were various clothes and items including hats, napkins, a surgical mask, a comb, an apple, cookies, a clothes hanger, socks, gloves, and a stuffed animal, with the resident’s food tray sitting on or near the clothes. A three‑drawer dresser next to the bed had multiple items cluttered on top, the top drawer was open with several packs of cigarettes visible inside, and clothes were on the floor in front of the dresser. Staff interviews indicated that the resident’s room had been full of clutter for years, that the resident became angry if staff touched the resident’s belongings, and that staff generally did not touch the resident’s items, despite the facility’s policies requiring belongings to be kept in a neat and orderly fashion and the environment to be safe and homelike. In addition to the clutter and cigarettes, the resident had medications at the bedside without an order for self‑administration and without locked storage. The resident reported having a bottle of Benadryl capsules in the dresser for sinus problems and believed it had been stolen, then produced two pink and white Benadryl capsules from a jacket pocket and placed them on the bed. The DON confirmed seeing two Benadryl capsules on the resident’s bed and the ADM stated they were not aware the resident had Benadryl in the room or was self‑medicating. Both the ADM and DON acknowledged there had been no interdisciplinary team assessment authorizing the resident to self‑administer medications, despite facility policy stating that residents have the right to self‑administer medications only if the interdisciplinary team determines it is clinically appropriate. Social services documentation showed the resident had been educated about hoarding behaviors and the associated health, safety, and tripping hazards, and noted ongoing noncompliance with room cleanliness, but there were no further follow‑up notes for several weeks prior to the survey. These actions and inactions resulted in a cluttered, unsafe room environment with accessible cigarettes and unsecured medications at the bedside, contrary to the facility’s policies on resident personal belongings, safe and homelike environment, and resident rights to receive treatment and supports for daily living safely.
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