Failure to Revise Care Plans After Behavioral Incidents and Falls
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to develop, revise, and implement comprehensive, measurable care plans that addressed residents’ behavioral symptoms and fall risks after significant events. For one resident with Alzheimer’s disease, dementia, PTSD, and moderate cognitive impairment, the record showed multiple resident‑to‑resident verbal altercations and an incident on 2/24/2026 in which he was pushed to the floor, hit his head, and sustained skin tears after yelling at another resident near an exit door alarm. Although the Risk Manager reported that care plan approaches were requested to be updated after incidents on 2/24/2026, 3/30/2026, and 4/2/2026, the behavioral care plan for this resident only addressed refusal of care and resistance to assistance, with no updates reflecting his pattern of yelling at other residents at the exit door. His falls care plan identified him as at risk for injury due to unsteady gait, dementia, pain, stroke history, psychotropic use, and antiplatelet therapy, but no new fall‑related approaches were documented after 3/6/2026 despite the fall with head impact. Another resident with early‑onset Alzheimer’s disease, dementia with psychotic and mood disturbance, severe cognitive impairment, and daily wandering had documented physical behavioral symptoms toward others and frequent wandering. Progress notes indicated excessive wandering, exit‑seeking behaviors that were not easily redirected, and involvement in five resident‑to‑resident altercations between 2/24/2026 and 4/2/2026, all related to his wandering. His care plan included a wandering/elopement problem and a behavioral problem describing constant pacing, wandering, impaired awareness of personal space, and risk for resident‑to‑resident conflict, with approaches such as frequent observation, redirection from other residents’ rooms and crowded areas, reassurance, and use of a sensory chew. However, there were no documented care plan updates specifically addressing the series of resident‑to‑resident altercations that occurred during the review period. A third resident with Alzheimer’s disease, dementia with mood disturbance, adjustment disorder, severe cognitive impairment, and no behaviors coded on the MDS had multiple documented resident‑to‑resident incidents. Progress notes described him standing over his roommate yelling about noise, an altercation with another resident on 3/16/2026, and an event on 3/25/2026 where he stuck his foot out in an attempt to trip another resident who was pacing in front of his view of the television. His behavioral care plan, initiated in 2024 and last edited on 2/18/2026, focused on increased confusion and agitation at the end of the day that may lead to verbal aggression, with general approaches such as discussing behaviors, assisting with coping methods, altering care approaches if he became combative, protecting others’ rights and safety, monitoring behaviors, and psychiatry referral. No care plan revisions were documented to specifically address his observed attempts to trip another resident or the repeated resident‑to‑resident altercations. A fourth resident with Alzheimer’s disease, dementia with agitation and other behavioral disturbance, PTSD‑related psychosis, severe cognitive impairment, and frequent physical and verbal behavioral symptoms toward others had multiple falls and a documented resident‑to‑resident altercation. Progress notes showed several unwitnessed or observed falls in common areas and on the floor, as well as an incident where he took another resident’s hat and attempted to push another resident out of a wheelchair, after which he was pushed by the other resident. His falls care plan identified him as at risk for falls due to expected physical decline, psychotropic use for PTSD, resistance and combativeness, and antiplatelet therapy, with approaches last updated in 2024 and 2025. No recent updates were made to his care plan to reflect the series of falls or the resident‑to‑resident interaction. The MDS RN and DON acknowledged that care plans for these residents had not been reviewed and revised with new approaches after the problem behaviors and incidents occurred, despite facility policy requiring care plan review and revision when significant changes, unmet outcomes, or new needs are identified. The facility’s written policy on care plan development, revised 11/28/2017, states that care plans will be reviewed and revised as needed, including when a significant change in condition is noted or when outcomes are not achieved, and that all team members must report changes in condition and unmet goals to the primary/charge nurse and MDS coordinator. Documentation is required to be consistent with the resident’s plan of care, and revisions may be made by any member of the interdisciplinary team on an as‑needed basis. In the cases of these four residents, surveyors found that despite documented behavioral incidents, resident‑to‑resident altercations, and repeated falls, the corresponding care plans were not updated with new, measurable approaches to address the identified behaviors and risks, resulting in a failure to ensure comprehensive care plans that met all of the residents’ needs.
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