Failure to Prevent Resident‑to‑Resident Physical Abuse by a Psychiatrically Complex Resident
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to protect residents from physical abuse between residents, specifically involving three residents with significant mental health and cognitive/behavioral histories. One resident with schizophrenia, paranoid personality disorder, restlessness, and agitation had a PASARR Level II indicating a long history of serious mental illness, psychosis, irritability, agitation, and difficulty with interpersonal interactions, and a need for structured environment, behavior plans, and crisis intervention. Another resident involved had traumatic brain injury, mild cognitive impairment, mood and anxiety disorders, and care plans addressing schizophrenia, TBI-related deficits, negative behaviors, and triggers such as people being rude, with interventions including close monitoring for anxiety, agitation, impulsivity, anger, and use of a structured environment and coping skills. A third resident had mild intellectual disability, oppositional defiant disorder, persistent mood disorder, autism spectrum disorder, and a PASARR Level II documenting a history of psychomotor agitation, verbal and physical aggression, opposition to care, and intrusive/invasive behaviors, with identified needs for 24‑hour supervision, plans to address physical aggression, boundary issues, and clear crisis procedures. In the first incident, during an evening smoke break, the resident with schizophrenia and paranoid personality disorder entered the smoke room and positioned himself/herself in line behind the resident with TBI. Believing the other resident might steal money, this resident moved in front of the TBI resident, who told him/her he/she could not cut in line. The resident with schizophrenia told the other resident not to touch him/her and then struck the TBI resident in the face, causing the resident to fall to the floor. Witnesses, including a CNA and other residents, reported that the aggressor then delivered multiple additional punches to the victim’s face and head while the victim was on the ground, with at least one witness describing the aggressor as “in another world” and clearly the aggressor. The victim sustained a busted lip, bruising and swelling to the forehead, and reported being hit multiple times in the mouth, stomach, and right ear, and was subsequently found with a visible cut on the lip and a reddened, tented right ear. The facility’s internal investigation, resident interviews, staff statements, and a police report all confirmed that the aggressor repeatedly punched the victim, constituting physical abuse as defined in the facility’s abuse policy. In the second set of events, the same resident with schizophrenia and paranoid personality disorder was involved in a separate altercation with the resident with intellectual disability, oppositional defiant disorder, mood disorder, and autism. The PASARR for this second resident documented a pattern of verbal and physical aggression, intrusiveness, and the need for a specific plan to address physical aggression and boundary issues, including how to redirect and manage crises. According to multiple statements and a police report, this resident repeatedly entered the aggressor’s room to obtain water, despite being told not to enter. On one occasion, the resident went into the room without knocking to use the bathroom sink for water and returned again for more water after being told not to come in. Later, in the hallway near the dining area, video reviewed by police showed the resident with schizophrenia shoulder‑checking the other resident and then throwing multiple closed‑fist punches to the resident’s face. Staff and resident accounts described both residents swinging and grappling, falling to the floor, and requiring several staff to physically separate them. The resident with intellectual disability sustained a bloody nose, swelling and redness to the left cheek, and an ear scratch, while the aggressor had bleeding from the outer ear. The facility’s leadership and regional nurse coordinators acknowledged that what occurred between these residents, as well as between the first pair of residents, met the definition of physical abuse under the facility’s abuse policy. Across both incidents, the residents involved had documented mental health, cognitive, and behavioral conditions, with PASARR and care plan documentation identifying needs for structured environments, close monitoring for agitation, anger, and intrusive behaviors, and specific plans for managing inappropriate and aggressive behaviors and crisis situations. Despite these identified needs and the facility’s abuse policy defining physical abuse as hitting, punching, slapping, and similar acts, the resident with schizophrenia and paranoid personality disorder was able to physically assault two different residents on separate occasions, including in a supervised setting such as the smoke room and later in a hallway near the dining area. The facility census at the time was 105 residents, and multiple staff and resident witnesses consistently described the aggressor’s actions as unprovoked or escalating quickly into repeated punches, resulting in injuries that required assessment and, in one case, hospital treatment with a dissolvable suture for a lip laceration.
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