Failure to Supervise Resident Vape Access and Enforce Smoking/Vaping Policy
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to monitor and supervise a resident with access to a vape in accordance with its own smoking and vaping policy and the resident’s care plan. The resident had traumatic spinal cord dysfunction with complete quadriplegia at C5–C7 and PTSD, and was cognitively intact with a BIMS score of 15. The care plan, initiated on 8/1/24, identified a potential for injury related to vaping and directed staff to provide 1:1 observation while the resident smoked cigarettes or vaped due to his inability to hold the device, and to keep all smoking materials at the nurses’ station or other designated area. The care plan also documented that the resident was often non‑compliant with the smoking policy by keeping his vape in his room. Despite this, the resident’s vape access and use were not consistently controlled or supervised as required. On 10/9/25, the EHR documented that management had taken the resident’s vape because he was not following the smoking policy, and noted a diagnosis of vaping‑related disorder with daily vaping. However, the Interdisciplinary Team care plan review dated 10/13/25 did not document any plan allowing the resident to keep a vape in his room solely to chew on, although the Administrator later stated such an arrangement had been made at that care conference. During an observation on 4/7/26, the resident was seen with a purple vape at the left side of his neck and stated that his mother obtained the vapes and that he usually kept them in a lock box in his room. Continuous observation of the room later that afternoon showed multiple staff and family entries into the room, but no documented intervention to remove or secure the vape after the ADON was informed by the surveyor that the resident currently had a vape. Staff interviews revealed inconsistent understanding and enforcement of the smoking and vaping policy and the resident’s restrictions. A CMA stated that the resident had a vape in his room and was allowed to have it, and that most staff were aware of it. A CNA stated the resident was not supposed to have a vape and that he used to have one in his room but not anymore. The ADON stated the resident was not supposed to have a vape and that if he had one, staff should ask to remove it and, if unsuccessful, contact his mother, but she was unsure what to do if that failed and was not aware he currently had a vape until informed by the surveyor. Another CNA reported seeing the vape in the room and stated the resident had told her he would do what he wants; she said she reported this to the nurse “all the time” but nothing changed. Additional interviews showed that some staff had directly observed vaping in the room despite the policy prohibiting smoking and vaping in the building. One CNA reported that the resident kept a vape in a locked drawer, that he would call for staff to retrieve it, and that she had seen him take a hit and observed smoke; she was only told about two weeks prior that he could not vape in his room and stated management had not informed her earlier. Another CNA recalled the resident having a THC vape in a locked drawer at one point. The Administrator stated that the resident was not using the vape but chewing on it for PTSD, that he could have it locked in his room against current policy, and that he and the resident’s mother had agreed the resident would not use it in his room except to chew on it. He acknowledged that the resident could take a hit from the vape and that this arrangement and rationale were not documented on the care plan. The facility’s written policy stated that smoking and vaping are prohibited in all buildings and on facility grounds except in designated outdoor areas, that residents who do not meet criteria for independent smoking must be supervised per their care plan, and that vaping devices are subject to the same rules as combustible smoking and may only be used in designated areas. Despite this, the resident had ongoing access to a vape in his room without the required supervision or consistent adherence to policy and care plan directives.
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