Failure to Implement and Communicate Elopement Interventions for Identified At-Risk Residents
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure appropriate interventions and supervision to prevent elopement for three residents who had been identified as elopement risks. One resident with dementia and suspected Lewy Body Disease was determined to be at risk for elopement on 3/26/26, and a Wanderguard device was applied as an intervention. Progress notes show that between 3/28/26 and 3/31/26 this resident repeatedly removed or cut off the Wanderguard, refused reapplication, and would not allow staff to check for the device. Despite this, the facility did not complete a comprehensive assessment to determine individualized interventions or an appropriate level of supervision after the device was removed and refused. The resident’s care plan from 3/26/26 through 4/13/26 did not include an elopement-focused care plan, and staff, including the SSD, were not consistently aware of the resident’s elopement risk when interpreting exit-seeking comments. The same resident exhibited ongoing confusion, hallucinations, wandering, and exit-seeking behaviors in the days leading up to the elopement. Progress notes document wandering in hallways, following staff, nervousness, hallucinations of groundhogs, and threatening statements, as well as comments about wanting to leave for a couple of weeks and feeling that staff would not let her go. The resident was moved to a room closer to the nursing station on 4/10/26, but this move was not based on her elopement risk. Hourly safety checks, which had been initiated on 3/23/26, were not consistently documented from 4/3/26 through 4/13/26, with multiple days and shifts showing no recorded checks. On 4/13/26, during the night shift, the resident was observed wandering, given food, and verbally redirected toward her room, but staff did not verify that she actually returned to the room before attending to other tasks. Shortly thereafter, staff discovered she was missing, and she was later found several blocks away after having left the building unsupervised. The facility also failed to implement and communicate individualized elopement interventions for two additional residents identified as elopement risks. One resident with dementia had an elopement evaluation on 3/27/26 and again on 4/14/26 indicating risk due to verbally expressing a desire to go home and staying near exit doors. However, the care plan labeled this resident as low risk and did not include individualized interventions or triggers to mitigate elopement, and the Kardex did not identify the resident as an elopement risk. Staff interviews confirmed that this resident could self-propel in a wheelchair, operate the handicap door button, and made exit-seeking comments when his wife left, yet no specific elopement interventions such as alarms or enhanced monitoring were in place. Another resident with dementia and Parkinson’s disease was identified on admission as an elopement risk due to a history of elopement from a previous facility and poor safety awareness. An elopement evaluation on 3/31/26 documented this risk and indicated use of a wander/elopement alarm, but there was no evidence of Wanderguard placement until 4/15/26, and the care plan only directed staff to engage the resident in purposeful activity without additional elopement-prevention measures. Staff acknowledged that no other interventions had been implemented to prevent this resident from leaving unsupervised prior to the later application of a Wanderguard. The facility’s own policies on Safety and Supervision of Residents and Wander Management required individualized, resident-centered assessments, care planning, communication of interventions to staff, and consistent implementation and monitoring of those interventions. Despite these policies, the records and interviews show that for all three residents, the facility did not ensure that elopement risk assessments were translated into comprehensive, individualized care plans with clear interventions and supervision levels. Staff were often unaware of residents’ elopement risk status, did not consistently perform or document required safety checks, and did not adjust interventions when residents refused or removed Wanderguard devices. These actions and inactions culminated in an elopement incident for one resident and left the other two residents at continued risk without fully implemented elopement-prevention measures.
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