Failure to Prevent Resident-to-Resident Physical Abuse During Smoking Breaks
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to protect residents from physical abuse during smoking breaks, resulting in injuries to three residents. In the first incident, two cognitively intact residents with significant psychiatric and behavioral histories were waiting in line for the smoking room. One resident, who had a history of schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, psychotic disorder, personality disorder, bipolar disorder, anxiety, major depressive disorder, traumatic brain injury, and prior verbal and physical threats, was supposed to smoke before others due to prior behaviors in the smoke room. Another resident with bipolar disorder, anxiety, major depressive disorder, and dementia with behaviors walked faster and cut in front of this resident in the smoking line. The resident in line reported the line-cutting to CNA A, but no corrective action was taken to move the second resident behind the first resident. The situation escalated when the first resident bumped or nudged the second resident, and the second resident turned and punched the first resident in the left eye; the first resident then hit the second resident back. Staff accounts were inconsistent regarding who struck first and whether a kick occurred, but all accounts confirmed a physical altercation resulting in a bruise, redness, and watery left eye for the first resident. The second incident involved two other cognitively intact residents with extensive psychiatric and behavioral diagnoses, including PTSD, depression, anxiety, adjustment disorder, panic attacks, histrionic personality disorder, antisocial behavior, low intellectual functioning, mild intellectual disability, bipolar disorder, and schizoaffective disorder. During an evening smoke break, one resident, who was out of personal “white” cigarettes and refused a flavored house cigarette, secretly obtained a personal cigarette from another peer. Another resident, known to have poor impulse control and boundary issues, told the peer that sharing personal cigarettes was against the rules. This led to verbal conflict, with the resident seeking the cigarette yelling, calling the other resident names, and complaining that the other resident was bossy and a tattle tale. CNA B intervened, made the aggressive resident return the cigarette, and instructed that resident to calm down or leave the smoke room. The aggressive resident moved to the far side of the room and sat down, but continued to be upset about the other resident being in their business. Despite the escalating verbal conflict, staff did not fully separate the residents or remove the aggressive resident from the smoke room, and at one point CNA B stepped out of the smoke room doorway, leaving the residents inside without direct staff presence. While the residents were in the smoke room without staff physically present inside, the aggressive resident picked up a metal ashtray and threw it across the room, striking the other resident in the left side of the face and eye area. The injured resident reported severe pain rated 9 out of 10, and assessments documented swelling, bruising, and a small abrasion under the left eye, with subsequent documentation of bruising and puffiness to the left face and temple. The aggressive resident later admitted to being angry, having had enough of the other resident being in their business, and intentionally aiming the ashtray at the other resident’s left eye. In both incidents, the facility’s failure to effectively intervene, separate residents, and maintain adequate supervision in the smoking area allowed resident-to-resident aggression to escalate to physical abuse causing injury. In both sets of events, the residents involved had known psychiatric and behavioral conditions, including histories of aggression, poor impulse control, and multiple psychiatric admissions. The facility’s own abuse and neglect policy defined abuse as the willful infliction of injury and included resident-to-resident altercations and physical abuse such as striking or injuring a resident. The incidents described show that residents were able to engage in physical aggression—punching and throwing an ashtray—resulting in observable injuries such as bruising, swelling, redness, watery eyes, and facial pain. The Administrator and ADON acknowledged that staff did not follow facility policies and procedures for managing escalating behaviors, including not moving residents in the smoking line as planned, not calling a code green when residents began yelling, not removing an aggressive resident from the smoke room, and leaving residents in the smoke room without continuous staff monitoring, which contributed to the occurrence of physical abuse between residents.
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