Inaccurate Documentation of Resident Altercations and Fall Events
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to maintain comprehensive and accurate medical records and safeguard resident-identifiable information, particularly in relation to abuse/altercation events and an accident. For one resident with left-sided hemiparesis, chronic pain, depression, and moderate cognitive impairment, the DON entered a late progress note documenting only a verbal disagreement about TV volume and stating that no harm occurred, even though the DON was not in the facility at the time of the incident. Punch records confirmed the DON was not present when the event allegedly occurred. In contrast, a grievance completed later documented that the resident reported being punched in the left shoulder by his roommate while lying in bed, and the resident later stated no one followed up with him or obtained a statement, and he was unaware of any investigation. Multiple CNAs and the SSD reported that the roommate had previously threatened to shoot and kill this resident over TV volume, that the residents were separated and then moved back into the same room on the DON’s direction, and that staff concerns about the move were disregarded. The SSD reported being told by CNA staff that the roommate threatened to shoot the resident and that the DON instructed that staff not document the incident in the progress notes, although the SSD stated she did not pass on that instruction and an agency nurse did document the threat in the aggressor’s record. The SSD and several CNAs described a subsequent physical altercation in which the more independent roommate struck the dependent resident, who could not use his left arm and was largely bed- or wheelchair-bound. Staff accounts indicated the aggressor had a history of verbal and physical aggression, including threats to choke, shoot, or kill his roommate, and that he was moved out of and then back into the shared room before the physical assault. The Administrator stated she was initially told by the DON that the altercation was only verbal and therefore did not believe it needed to be reported as abuse. Later, grievance information indicated the resident reported being hit, and interviews with both residents confirmed that the aggressor admitted to slapping or hitting his roommate in the head or shoulder. An observation days later showed bruising on the dependent resident’s left bicep and shoulder, which the resident attributed to the altercation, and this was verified by a CNA. A second component of the deficiency concerns another resident with dementia, severe cognitive impairment, a history of falls, weakness, and total dependence for ADLs, who was reportedly lowered to the floor during a Hoyer lift transfer from wheelchair to bed. The progress notes contained only a brief statement that the resident was lowered to the floor, with no post-fall documentation completed at the time of the incident. An eCare triage note later documented that an unnamed facility staff member told the on-call provider that the resident had been lowered to the floor earlier in the shift, but by the end of the shift the resident cried out in pain in the right inner thigh, requested not to be moved, and was then saying she had actually fallen rather than been lowered. The call was categorized as a new fall, and the NP ordered pain medication, cold compresses, and a STAT X-ray. The NP’s subsequent note did not reference the fall or pain complaint, and the facility’s incident log for several months showed no recorded fall or incident for this resident. An anonymous staff member stated the resident fell out of the mechanical lift and was not lowered, and that the DON and ADON told staff to report that the resident was lowered rather than that she fell. The medical director confirmed that the pain complaint was consistent with an injury from falling out of a Hoyer or incorrect transfer and that he considered the event a fall due to the drastic change in planes, yet there was no corresponding fall entry on the incident log.
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