Failure to Prevent Multiple Resident-to-Resident Physical Abuse Incidents
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to protect residents from physical abuse in multiple resident‑to‑resident altercations, despite having an Abuse and Neglect Policy defining abuse as the willful infliction of injury, intimidation, or punishment resulting in physical harm, pain, or mental anguish. The policy specifies that physical abuse includes hitting, slapping, punching, biting, and kicking, and applies to all residents regardless of mental or physical condition. In several incidents, residents with known psychiatric and behavioral histories engaged in physical aggression toward peers, resulting in injuries such as head swelling, knuckle injury, and a facial laceration. In the first series of events, one resident with bipolar disorder, intermittent explosive disorder, ADHD, intellectual disability, major depressive disorder, anxiety disorder, and a history of angry outbursts and poor judgment (assessed as cognitively intact on the MDS) was on 1:1 observation with a CNA when he/she became verbally involved with another resident in the main front hall. This second resident had bipolar disorder, ADHD, bipolar II disorder, chronic PTSD, generalized anxiety disorder, autistic disorder, and a PASRR noting behavioral difficulty, anger control issues, boundary problems, and impaired judgment, and was also assessed as cognitively intact. During a verbal altercation about another resident, the 1:1 CNA attempted to redirect the first resident and instructed him/her to walk away. As the resident began to walk away, he/she stated an intention to kick the other resident in the face and then kicked the peer in the leg. The second resident responded by striking the first resident on the right side of the head multiple times, causing several lumps and swelling, while sustaining injury to his/her own right hand/knuckles. Staff called a behavioral emergency code and separated the residents after the physical fight had already occurred. In a separate incident, the same second resident, who had a documented history of behavioral escalation, fixation, and difficulty with redirection, left his/her assigned unit against direction during a period of ongoing behavioral concerns. While upset about not having access to a hangout area and distressed about another resident’s family not wanting him/her around, this resident directed aggression toward another peer who was walking by and kicked that resident in the shin. The targeted resident, who was cognitively impaired and generally kept to him/herself, reported remembering being kicked, feeling upset, but not retaliating; no physical injury was documented. Facility documentation characterized this as a resident‑to‑resident altercation initiated by the aggressive resident after several days of escalating behaviors. Another altercation involved two cognitively intact residents with psychiatric diagnoses, including traumatic brain injury and paranoid schizophrenia for one resident, and mild cognitive impairment, paranoid schizophrenia, and anxiety disorder for the other. Multiple CNAs reported that the two residents bumped into each other in a hallway, exchanged words, and then “squared up” with raised fists. One resident hit the other above the eye, with some accounts indicating two punches to the face, causing the struck resident to hit his/her head on the wall and fall to the floor. The injured resident was later observed with two scratches above the left eyebrow, which staff cleaned and covered with a bandage. The aggressor resident admitted he/she hit the other resident on purpose and was trying to hurt him/her. Staff were present in nearby halls and ran over when they heard yelling, but the physical blows occurred before they could stop the assault. Across these events, the facility’s own investigation documents describe the altercations as substantiated resident‑to‑resident physical aggression, initiated by residents who kicked or struck peers intentionally and not accidentally. The Psychiatric NP acknowledged that kicking someone for no reason constitutes abuse and noted that residents involved had impulsive behaviors and difficulty reasoning about consequences. The DON and Administrator described the residents as impulsive and overstimulated, with actions they considered not predictable, while also confirming the sequence of verbal escalation, threats, and subsequent physical aggression in the incidents. These documented episodes of willful physical contact—kicking and punching—between residents, resulting in injuries and occurring despite staff presence and prior knowledge of behavioral histories, constitute the failure to prevent physical abuse as required by the facility’s abuse policy.
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