Failure to Enforce Smoking Policy and Control Smoking Materials for Oxygen‑Dependent Smokers
Summary
Facility administration failed to ensure implementation of its Smoking/Vaping policy and adequate supervision for residents who smoked, including oxygen‑dependent residents, resulting in unsafe smoking practices and a serious injury. Staff, including CNAs and nursing leadership, were aware that multiple residents routinely retained cigarettes and lighters on their person or in their rooms and smoked in non‑designated areas, yet smoking materials were not consistently confiscated or controlled. During a tour, three residents were observed entering and leaving the designated smoking area with their own cigarettes and lighters, without obtaining them from or returning them to the supervising CNA, and then returning to rooms marked with “Oxygen in Use/No Smoking” signs while still in possession of smoking materials. One oxygen‑dependent resident with COPD, alcohol abuse, noncompliance with treatment, and intact cognition had a documented history of smoking in his room, including while on oxygen, dating back months before the incident. Nursing notes showed he was found smoking in his room on several occasions, including once while connected to his oxygen concentrator and another time with oxygen turned off, and he repeatedly refused to relinquish cigarettes and alcohol, becoming belligerent. Law enforcement was called at least once, and the DON and unit manager were notified, but there was no documentation that his smoking materials were consistently removed or that effective safeguards were put in place. His care plan addressed smoking and behaviors but did not include specific oxygen safety interventions, and he reported that he kept all smoking materials with him, smoked in his room and bathroom, and rarely saw staff in his room prior to the burn event. On the night of the burn incident, a CNA observed this resident smoking in his room while wearing a nasal cannula, saw the cannula ignite, and alerted an RN, who initiated a Code Red and emergency response. Documentation showed the resident sustained second‑degree burns to his nose and right cheek, experienced respiratory distress and other symptoms, and required transfer to an ED and then a burn unit, where he was intubated and treated for facial and inhalation burns. Other residents, including two additional oxygen‑dependent smokers and a non‑oxygen‑dependent smoker, reported that they routinely kept cigarettes and lighters on their person, sometimes smoked in their rooms or bathrooms, and did not trust staff to store their supplies. Smoking evaluations and care plans for these residents labeled them as safe smokers, often without supervision, and progress notes lacked documentation of noncompliance despite resident statements and staff interviews confirming ongoing violations of the smoking policy. A CNA reported that most smokers refused to surrender supplies, that leadership had long been aware of this pattern, and that staff training on smoking and oxygen safety was limited to self‑study folders without formal instruction or verification of understanding. Immediate Jeopardy at scope and severity level L was identified related to these failures, beginning on the date of the burn incident and remaining in effect through the survey exit. The IJ was based on the administration’s failure to ensure that staff, including CNAs, RNs, and the DON, enforced the smoking policy, removed smoking materials from oxygen‑dependent residents’ rooms, and prevented residents from smoking in their rooms while oxygen was in use. The facility also did not timely implement an effective, facility‑wide corrective approach to address systemic issues in smoking risk assessment, supervision, and environmental safety controls, allowing residents to continue to possess smoking materials and smoke inside the building and in non‑designated areas.
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