Abusive Physical Restraint and Humiliation of Cognitively Impaired Resident by CNAs
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to protect a cognitively impaired resident with vascular dementia and other psychiatric and neurologic diagnoses from physical and psychosocial abuse by three CNAs. The resident had severely impaired cognition, intermittent ability to make himself understood, and a history of some physical and verbal behaviors, but was not known to reject care and typically required only supervision or touching assistance for transfers and ambulation. On the evening in question, a nurse heard yelling and arguing from another resident’s room and found this resident standing by a female resident’s bed, with both residents hitting and smacking each other as he yelled at her to get out of his bed. After staff separated the residents, a CNA took the resident to the nurses’ station, where he continued to be described as physically abusive and verbally aggressive toward staff. Subsequently, multiple CNAs physically controlled and restrained the resident in a manner that was later substantiated by the facility as physical abuse. Video footage showed two CNAs each holding one of the resident’s arms as they directed him down the hall toward the nurses’ station and sat him in a chair. When the resident became agitated and attempted to stand, a third CNA joined them; the two original CNAs grabbed his arms while the third CNA grabbed the back of his sweatpants, pulling them up and back as he was forcefully placed back into the chair. The two CNAs then held his arms down against the chair armrests with closed hands over his wrists and lower forearms, and one CNA straddled his leg. At various points, different CNAs took turns holding his arms or hands while he was kept in the chair for several minutes before being allowed to get up and return to his room. Witness accounts from cognitively intact residents and staff further described the abusive nature of the interaction. One resident reported seeing two female staff hold the resident down in a chair while he only wanted to go to his room, stating he was not fighting and that staff were teasing him; another resident reported staff laughing and teasing the resident, telling him they were holding him down and that he should not move, including calling him “stupid.” A CNA witness stated she did not like how the staff handled the situation and, when asked if she would consider it abuse if it were her family member, she answered yes. The physician later documented that the resident’s behaviors were being instigated by staff and that he was responding to how staff intervened, describing him as being in a protective mode. Following the incident, the resident was noted to have a skin tear and bruise of unknown origin on his arm, increased agitation, and was started on Depakote for behavioral management for two days before it was discontinued. The facility’s own investigation, initiated after reviewing video footage while following up on the earlier resident-to-resident altercation, concluded that physical abuse had occurred. The three CNAs involved were identified as the perpetrators, and their personnel files documented termination for violating residents’ rights, including abuse and failure to report to a supervisor. The facility’s abuse policy defined abuse as the willful infliction of injury, unreasonable confinement, intimidation, or punishment with resulting physical harm, pain, or mental anguish, and specified that willful meant acting deliberately, not necessarily intending harm. The actions of the CNAs in forcefully seating the resident, holding his arms down, straddling his leg, and teasing and laughing at him were determined by the facility to meet this definition of abuse, resulting in actual harm to the resident, including bruising, a skin tear, increased agitation, and the need for additional psychotropic medication for behavioral control immediately following the incident.
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