Elopement of Dementia Resident After Transfer Off Secured Unit Without Adequate Supervision
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to implement effective, resident-specific elopement interventions and provide adequate supervision for a resident with dementia and a known history of exit-seeking and wandering. The resident had multiple diagnoses including dementia, anxiety, unspecified psychosis, traumatic brain injury, bipolar disorder, cognitive communication deficit, difficulty walking, and depression, and was assessed as having severe cognitive impairment for daily decision-making. Elopement Risk and Community Survival Skills assessments indicated the resident should be on elopement risk protocol, and care plans documented that the resident had a history of exit-seeking and wandering, resided on a secured unit due to dementia, and required supervision when out in the community. Despite this, the resident was transitioned from a secured memory care unit to a less restrictive unit without a written plan for safe adjustment, and the care plan related to exit-seeking and wandering was not updated to reflect new interventions or the room change. The resident’s transfer from the secured unit to an unsecured unit occurred with the daughter/POA present, and documentation indicated the resident tolerated the move without distress and appeared to adjust appropriately. A wanderguard was ordered and documented as placed on the resident’s left ankle, and an order was written to observe the wanderguard every shift. However, staff on the new unit were not consistently aware that the resident was an elopement risk or that a wanderguard was in place. One CNA assigned to the resident’s hallway did not receive shift report, did not know there was a new resident in the room, and did not see the resident at all during the shift, only discovering an unmade bed and a cell phone in the room later in the evening. Another CNA saw the resident around lunchtime but did not check for a wanderguard because she did not know the resident had one. The activity aide, who took the resident outside for a scheduled smoking break, was also unaware that the resident was wearing a wanderguard or was an elopement risk. On the day of the incident, video surveillance showed the resident arriving at the front of the building in a silver car late in the morning and then walking away from the building a few minutes later; the administrator noted that no wanderguard was visible on the resident’s ankle in the video. The resident was later seen by the activity aide at a 1:00 p.m. smoke break and then was not seen again by staff. That evening, staff realized the resident was missing, a code pink was called, and extensive searches of the building and surrounding area were conducted by staff and later by law enforcement. The facility’s records showed the wanderguard was signed out for the evening shift even though the resident had already left the building, and the DON later indicated the wanderguard alarms did not sound because the resident had removed the device prior to exiting. The resident was ultimately located by police more than 24 hours after leaving the facility, disoriented and covered in dirt and moss, and was transported to the hospital for evaluation. The surveyors determined there were no 15-minute safety checks, no 72-hour charting or assessments to monitor safety and adjustment after the transfer off the locked unit, and no updated care plan interventions to address the resident’s elopement risk on the unsecured unit, leading to the resident’s unsupervised elopement. The immediate jeopardy was determined to have begun when the facility was unaware that the resident had exited the facility without supervision and continued until the resident was found by local police and transported to the hospital. The administrator and regional nurse consultant acknowledged during interview that there should have been more safety checks initiated for the resident after being moved off the locked memory care unit. The facility’s policy on Code Pink-Missing Resident/Elopement specified interventions for elopement risks such as wanderguard bracelets, increased monitoring including 15-minute visual checks or 1:1 supervision, and evaluation for a secured unit if appropriate, but these measures were not implemented or documented for this resident following the transfer to the unsecured unit. The surveyors concluded that the facility failed to ensure the environment was free from accident hazards and failed to provide adequate supervision to prevent the resident’s elopement.
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