Failure to Implement Care-Planned Behavioral Interventions for Dementia-Related Episode
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide adequate, necessary, and effective interventions for a resident with dementia and behavioral symptoms, as outlined in his care plan. The resident was admitted with vascular dementia, unspecified psychosis, depression, seizure disorder, cognitive communication deficit, unsteadiness on feet, and muscle weakness, and had a care plan addressing behaviors such as restlessness, anxiety, physical aggression, hallucinations, delusions, exit seeking, verbal aggression, and wandering. The care plan interventions included approaching the resident calmly, re-approaching later if he became agitated, attempting redirection, communicating care before tasks, providing non-judgmental support, keeping him safe during behavioral episodes, documenting behaviors, notifying the physician when behaviors persisted, and using non-pharmacological interventions and activities of interest to keep him engaged. On the evening of the incident, during a medication pass, an RN heard yelling and arguing from another resident’s room and found the cognitively impaired resident standing by a female resident’s bed while both residents were hitting and smacking each other. The resident was yelling at the female resident to get out of his bed. The RN attempted to separate the residents and diffuse the situation, and an unidentified CNA took the resident to the nurses’ station, where he continued to be physically abusive and verbally aggressive toward staff. The physician was notified and new orders were obtained for Haldol and Depakote, and the resident’s son consented to the new medications. The resident was later taken to bed and fell asleep, and the as-needed Haldol was not administered, but Depakote was started as a daily medication. The nursing progress note did not document specific details on how staff attempted to diffuse the situation or what non-pharmacological interventions were used in response to this behavioral episode. Subsequent documentation indicated that the resident had been reported to the physician as having increased agitation and aggressive behaviors with psychotic issues, and that Depakote had been started in response to the incident. The physician later documented that the resident was being treated inappropriately and that his behaviors were instigated by staff, describing the resident as being in a protective mode and stating that he had been told a CNA grabbed the resident. The physician stated that staff should have tried redirection without force, removal from the provoking area, and other calming strategies, and that holding down a cognitively impaired resident could elicit a retaliatory response. CNAs interviewed about the incident reported that they “arm to armed” the resident by wrapping their arms around his arms to move him from the other resident’s room to a chair near the nurses’ station, and that when he stood up and became argumentative or went toward a CNA, they again “arm to armed” him back into the chair. One CNA reported that additional staff from another floor came up and that this likely worsened the resident’s agitation and was overwhelming for him. Multiple CNAs stated they did not feel properly trained to deal with aggressive behaviors, reporting only limited or computer-based training and describing that management’s guidance was mainly to offer food or snacks during behaviors, which contrasted with the more comprehensive behavioral management approach described in the facility’s behavior management policy and the resident’s care plan. The facility’s behavior management policy required that residents exhibiting behaviors negatively affecting themselves or others be reviewed by a behavior management team, that root causes and target behaviors be identified, and that individualized plans of care and non-pharmacological interventions be used to minimize the need for medications or allow for the lowest possible dose. In this case, the record and interviews did not show that the non-pharmacological, de-escalation, and redirection strategies specified in the resident’s care plan and the facility’s policy were effectively implemented or documented during and after the behavioral episode. Instead, staff used physical control techniques (“arm to armed”) and obtained new psychotropic medication orders without clear evidence of prior, thorough use of individualized, non-pharmacological interventions as outlined in the care plan and policy. This failure to follow the resident’s behavior care plan and the facility’s behavior management program requirements led to the cited deficiency for not ensuring the resident received appropriate treatment and services for dementia-related behaviors.
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