Failure to Manage Aggressive Behaviors and Protect Cognitively Impaired Roommate From Assault
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to protect a cognitively and physically impaired resident from abuse by a roommate with known, escalating aggressive and delusional behaviors. One resident had dementia with severely impaired cognition (BIMS score of 3), required substantial assistance with bed mobility, was dependent on staff for transfers, and used a wheelchair for mobility. This resident’s care plan identified impaired cognitive function, communication problems, hearing impairment, and limited physical mobility related to a CVA, with interventions including anticipating and meeting needs, cueing, reorienting, supervising as needed, and ensuring a safe environment. Despite these identified vulnerabilities and the need for supervision and safety, the resident was left in a shared room with a roommate who had documented behavioral issues. The roommate carried diagnoses including metabolic encephalopathy, dementia, mild cognitive impairment, delusional disorder, anxiety disorder, and major depressive disorder. From admission, this resident was noted to have a change in mental status, chronic decline, and wandering, and was residing on a secured memory unit, ambulating independently without a device. A PRN order for trazodone 25 mg every six hours as needed for anxiety, restlessness, or agitation was in place. Clinical documentation from early in the month showed multiple episodes of increased agitation, yelling, confusion, paranoia, combativeness with care, and repeated refusals of medications, weights, skin checks, vital signs, blood work, and treatments. On one occasion, the resident was found in another resident’s bed and could not be redirected despite multiple attempts. However, the care plan did not include a behavior care plan or a care plan addressing refusals, despite these ongoing behavioral and refusal patterns. In the days immediately preceding the incident, staff documented that the aggressive resident was paranoid, yelling, talking to him/herself, and not easily redirected, with medications only taken after multiple attempts. Trazodone had previously been administered and documented as effective for behavioral symptoms, but on the evening and night before the assault, staff did not administer the PRN trazodone in response to documented agitation and behavioral symptoms, did not reattempt administration after refusal, and did not implement alternative non-pharmacological interventions. During the night, the resident became belligerent when breakfast could not be provided, refused offered food and fluids, threw food at staff, refused trazodone, and remained agitated and talking to him/herself. Staff left this resident unsupervised in the shared room with the cognitively and physically impaired roommate, with only brief observation outside the door and no frequent checks, despite ongoing agitation. Approximately thirty minutes later, staff heard a loud noise and entered the room to find the aggressive resident standing over the impaired roommate, holding a round hairbrush and yelling. The impaired resident was found with bruising to the left eye and face, bruising to the right hand, and hair and face saturated with lotion. EMS documentation recorded that staff reported finding the aggressive resident on top of the roommate, beating the roommate in the face and head with a heavy hairbrush, with severe bruising, swelling, discoloration, pain, and tenderness to the face and forehead, and lotion dripping from the ears. Hospital imaging confirmed a new acute subarachnoid hemorrhage compared to prior imaging, and the resident’s blood thinner was held for two weeks. Subsequent observations noted persistent facial and extremity bruising and that the resident appeared scared and fearful after the incident. The facility’s DON stated that if the aggressive resident had been supervised, the incident could have been prevented, and the surveyors determined these failures constituted Immediate Jeopardy to resident health and safety. Staff interviews further described that the aggressive resident had been intermittently talking to him/herself, screaming, slamming doors, wandering the halls, and yelling during the night, and that staff recognized in hindsight that the resident should have been brought to a common area for supervision rather than left in the room. Nursing staff acknowledged not immediately administering PRN trazodone when behaviors began, not reapproaching after refusal, and leaving the resident alone in the room with the vulnerable roommate while the resident was still talking to him/herself. The psychiatric APRN reported not receiving clear behavior reports, stated that trazodone should have been offered and its effectiveness documented when behaviors occurred, and indicated that the resident should have been supervised and ensured to be completely calm and back to baseline before returning to the shared room. The facility’s abuse prevention policy required assessing, care planning, and monitoring residents with behaviors that may lead to conflict, and the Q15 minute and 1:1 policy described procedures for observation of residents at risk of aggression, but a behavioral management policy was not provided when requested. These documented actions and inactions led to the abusive incident and the resulting Immediate Jeopardy finding.
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