Failure to Protect Resident From Known Aggressive Roommate Resulting in Physical Abuse
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to protect residents from abuse by not implementing appropriate interventions after clear threats and known aggressive behavior, which led to a resident‑to‑resident physical assault. One resident with left‑sided hemiplegia, significant dependence on staff for ADLs, and a care plan goal to remain free from bruising and injury was verbally threatened by his roommate, who stated he would kill or shoot him over TV volume. Staff, including a CNA and the Social Services Designee (SSD), were aware of the threat, and the aggressive resident was initially moved to a private room. Despite this, the DON later directed that the aggressive resident be returned to the same room, without documented assessment of the threatened resident’s feelings of safety, without documented room‑change orders, and without updating either resident’s care plan or instituting increased monitoring or other protective interventions. Multiple staff interviews confirmed that the aggressive resident had a history of verbal and physical aggression, including prior physical assault of staff and specific threats to choke, shoot, or kill his roommate. Staff voiced concerns to management that returning the aggressive resident to the same room was unsafe, particularly because the threatened resident was physically dependent and unable to defend himself. Nonetheless, the residents were placed back together. On the night of the incident, staff reported that the aggressive resident punched or slapped his roommate while he was lying in bed, with his affected left side toward the aggressor. The victim later described being hit in the left shoulder while dozing, and the aggressor admitted to hitting him in the head or shoulder after becoming angry about language used by the roommate. Following the altercation, the victim reported pain and later exhibited a yellow‑green bruise on the left bicep and a quarter‑sized bruise on the left shoulder, which he attributed to the assault and which a CNA verified. Progress notes and interviews showed that the DON, who was not present at the time of the incident, authored a late entry describing only a verbal altercation and initially reported to the Administrator that there had been no physical contact. There was no timely documentation of family or physician notification regarding the victim being hit, and the victim stated that no one followed up with him for a statement and that he was unaware of any investigation. Staff also reported that they were not asked to provide statements at the time of the incident. The facility’s own abuse policy required immediate protection of residents, reporting to the Administrator and state agency, thorough investigation, documentation, and care plan review and revision, but the report shows that these steps were not carried out in connection with the threats and subsequent physical assault between these two residents. The aggressive resident’s record documented a care plan for inappropriate behaviors, including verbal and physical aggression and delusions, with goals of no injury to self or others and interventions such as documenting behaviors and redirecting him. A progress note documented that he had threatened to shoot his roommate over TV volume, and the on‑call physician ordered medication and increased checks. However, there is no evidence that this known risk was translated into sustained environmental or supervision interventions to prevent further conflict, nor that the threatened resident’s vulnerability and bleeding risk were incorporated into protective planning. Staff accounts consistently indicated that the decision to reunite the residents in the same room, despite prior threats and staff objections, directly preceded the physical assault that caused bruising and psychosocial harm, including fear, withdrawal, and self‑isolation in the victim.
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