Failure to Thoroughly Investigate Resident-to-Resident Abuse Allegations
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to thoroughly investigate allegations of resident-to-resident abuse involving two residents. One resident with left-sided hemiplegia, chronic pain, anemia with aspirin therapy, and significant dependence on staff for ADLs reported that his roommate came through the closed curtain and punched him in the left shoulder while he was lying in bed dozing. His care plan included interventions to assist with transfers and mobility and to observe for bruising due to bleeding risk, and his MDS documented moderate cognitive impairment and extensive physical assistance needs. Despite this, the initial documentation by the DON, entered as a late entry, characterized the incident only as a disagreement over TV volume with no harm to the resident, and there was no contemporaneous documentation of a physical assault, assessment for injury, or immediate investigation. Multiple interviews and records later confirmed that a physical altercation had occurred and that the facility did not conduct a timely, thorough investigation as required by its abuse policy. The resident who reported being hit stated that he told a nurse about the incident but could not recall which nurse, and he reported that no one followed up with him or obtained a statement. The SSD learned of the incident days later, interviewed both residents, and documented that the dependent resident described being struck in the shoulder and having a “knot” on his shoulder, which the SSD did not verify. The alleged aggressor resident, who had a care plan for inappropriate behaviors including verbal/physical aggression and delusions, admitted in interviews and on a grievance form that he slapped or hit his roommate in the head or shoulder after being angered by the use of profanity. Staff interviews revealed that CNAs were aware of the physical assault, observed the dependent resident as scared and terrified, and were never asked to provide statements. Additional documentation showed that prior to the physical assault, the aggressive resident had threatened to shoot his roommate over TV volume, resulting in a temporary room change, and that staff questioned why the two residents were later placed back in the same room given ongoing issues. On observation weeks after the incident, the dependent resident had yellow-green bruising on the left bicep and a quarter-sized bruise on the left shoulder in various stages of healing, which he attributed to the altercation; this was verified by a CNA. The facility’s abuse policy required that all alleged violations of abuse, including resident-to-resident incidents, be investigated within five working days, with interviews of the resident, the accused, and all witnesses, collection of written statements, review of medical records, documentation of the investigation, and revision of care plans as needed. The Administrator and VPO confirmed there were no witness statements and no documented investigation by the DON, and the Administrator acknowledged that the investigation was not thorough, demonstrating noncompliance with the facility’s own abuse investigation policy. The second resident involved, who was more independent and had diagnoses including anxiety, hypertension, heart failure, and pulmonary embolism, had a care plan for inappropriate and aggressive behaviors with goals to prevent injury to self or others. Progress notes documented that he had previously threatened to shoot his roommate over TV volume, leading to physician notification and temporary relocation. Despite this history and staff concerns, the residents were returned to the same room, and when the subsequent physical assault occurred, the facility failed to promptly recognize, document, and investigate it as abuse. The lack of timely assessment, failure to obtain and document statements from involved staff and residents, and absence of a complete investigative record as required by policy formed the basis of the cited deficiency.
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