Failure to Supervise Aggressive Resident During Room Maintenance Leads to Resident-to-Resident Altercation
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure adequate supervision and safety planning for a resident with known aggressive behaviors during a scheduled room maintenance activity that required removal from the resident’s room. Resident #1 had diagnoses including dementia, schizoaffective disorder, depressive type, and adjustment disorder, and was identified on the MDS as severely cognitively impaired. The resident’s care plan documented psychotropic medication use, a history of refusal of care, paranoia/delusions, hitting, and prior resident-to-resident altercations, with interventions that included keeping the resident in a visible area when out of bed and monitoring for behaviors such as hitting and paranoia. Despite these identified risks and interventions, the resident was displaced from his/her room for a thorough cleaning and placed in a common area without an individualized, established supervision plan specific to this situation. On the day of the incident, housekeeping staff stripped the floors and washed the walls of Resident #1’s room, requiring the resident to be removed from the room from before 10:00 AM until between 3:00 PM and 4:00 PM. The Assistant Director of Nursing stated that the plan was for Resident #1 to attend activities from 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM, then sit in a chair outside the room for lunch, and then return to activities after lunch. LPN #3 reported that Resident #1 was moved into the hallway while cleaning took place and was to be monitored by NAs assigned to that wing. However, during the time of the incident, NAs were passing lunch trays and LPN #3 was performing blood glucose monitoring, and therefore was unable to monitor Resident #1. Resident #1, who preferred to stay in his/her room and was not known to wander, was not continuously observed during this period. During this lapse in supervision, Resident #1 entered another resident’s room (Resident #2). Resident #2, who had diagnoses including disorganized schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, and generalized anxiety disorder, was moderately cognitively impaired and independent with activities of daily living, with a care plan addressing mood and behavior issues such as agitation and yelling. A reportable event documented that Resident #2 reported being struck by Resident #1 and then pushed Resident #1, causing Resident #1 to fall. Staff responded after hearing commotion in Resident #2’s room and found Resident #1 on the floor, bleeding from a laceration to the right eyebrow. Resident #1 was later found to have sustained a laceration to the right eye and a closed fracture of the right maxillary sinus. This sequence of events demonstrates that the facility did not implement adequate supervision or a specific safety plan for Resident #1 during the room maintenance displacement, resulting in a resident-to-resident altercation with injury. The report also describes a prior incident involving Resident #1 and another resident, Resident #5, on a secured memory care unit. Resident #1’s care plan at that time identified severe cognitive impairment, psychotropic medication use, dementia diagnosis, and behaviors requiring staff intervention and redirection for safety, including wandering, exit seeking, and intrusive behaviors. Resident #5 had vascular dementia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar type, and an unspecified head injury, was severely cognitively impaired, dependent with bathing, toileting, and personal hygiene, and able to ambulate independently, with a care plan directing staff to intervene and redirect when wandering or when behaviors became intrusive or affected other residents. On the day of that earlier event, NA #1 observed Resident #5 walking down the hallway on the side of Resident #1’s room; as Resident #5 approached the doorway, Resident #1 stepped out and punched Resident #5 in the face under the eye. Resident #5 sustained mild facial swelling, and staff removed Resident #5 from the area and notified the nurse. This prior altercation further reflects that Resident #1 had a documented history of aggressive behavior toward other residents that required close supervision and redirection, which was not effectively implemented during the later room maintenance event. The facility’s own policy on residents’ right to freedom from abuse, neglect, and exploitation stated that residents have the right to be free from abuse and that the facility has zero tolerance for abuse of any kind. Despite this, Resident #1, with a known history of hitting and resident-to-resident altercations, was not provided with adequate supervision or a clearly defined, individualized supervision plan during the extended period out of his/her room for cleaning. The lack of effective monitoring and failure to ensure that staff were available and actively supervising during a known high-risk situation directly preceded the resident’s unsupervised entry into another resident’s room and the resulting altercation and injuries.
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