Failure to Investigate Multiple Allegations of Sexual Abuse by a Nurse Aide
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to conduct thorough investigations into multiple resident allegations of sexual abuse by a nurse aide, and failure to follow its own abuse policy requiring immediate removal of the accused staff from resident contact pending investigation. The facility’s policy on abuse, neglect, exploitation or misappropriation, dated August 21, 2025, required that all allegations be thoroughly investigated and that any employee accused of resident abuse be placed on leave with no resident contact until the investigation was complete. Despite this, the personnel file for Nurse Aide 1 showed only scattered, non-consecutive suspension days for an incident involving one resident and no documented discipline for another resident’s allegation, and there was no evidence that he was removed from resident care while allegations were being reviewed. The Nursing Home Administrator and acting Director of Nursing acknowledged that they did not conduct investigations into the allegations because they did not believe abuse had occurred and instead treated at least one allegation as a grievance. One cognitively intact resident (Resident 14), who was always continent of urine and required minimal help with daily care, reported in a grievance that around 5:00 a.m. a male nurse aide entered her room while she was sleeping and put his hand inside her pants to see if she was wet, without explanation, even though she had no history of incontinence. She stated in interview that he touched her inappropriately, that she felt violated, and that she immediately requested to speak to a nurse but was not seen until about 7:30 a.m., at which time she reported the incident to an LPN. She further stated that the Director of Nursing did not take her seriously and that she felt her complaint was dismissed. There was no documented evidence that the facility obtained statements from this resident or involved staff, or that a thorough investigation was completed to rule out sexual abuse. Another cognitively intact resident (Resident 6), who required assistance for ADLs and was usually incontinent of urine and bowel, filed a grievance stating that during incontinence care the same nurse aide left her naked on her bed twice with the door and curtain open while he left the room to gather supplies. She reported that he commented that she was not allowed to defecate, remarked on her soiling, asked if she slept in the nude, and told her he liked looking at naked women, including another woman there who did not like him doing it either. She also reported that he told her he had been accused of touching another nurse aide, that his suspension days were split so they did not affect his paycheck because staffing was short, and that other residents had complained about his care and comments. In interview, she confirmed feeling exposed and stated she feared for residents who could not speak for themselves. There was no documentation of interviews with her or staff, or of a comprehensive investigation into her allegations. A third cognitively intact resident (Resident 7), who required help to get in and out of the bathroom and was always incontinent of urine and bowel, stated in interview that she did not want this nurse aide to provide care because he startled her awake by sticking his hand inside her brief to see if she was wet, instead of asking her as other staff did. She reported that she did not like him putting his hand in her brief and did not want him back in her room. There was no documented evidence that the facility obtained statements from her or staff or conducted a thorough investigation into her allegation to rule out sexual abuse. A fourth cognitively intact resident (Resident 1), who required observation for ambulation and was frequently incontinent of urine and bowel, was the subject of a grievance initiated by her family member and Power of Attorney. The family member reported that the resident called her at about 1:00 a.m. crying, stating that the male nurse aide had put his hand inside her brief while she was sleeping and that his fingers penetrated her vagina, and that he had done this two or three other times; the resident reportedly expressed fear that she would be raped. The family member stated she informed the Director of Social Services that the resident said the aide had stuck his hand in her crotch, and that the resident later believed the aide had been fired when he had not. Staff interviews corroborated that the resident told a nurse aide and an LPN that the male aide had put his hand in her pants and digitally penetrated her, and that this was reported up the chain to an RN, who then reported it to the Director of Social Services and the Assistant DON. Another RN reported asking the Nursing Home Administrator if the aide would be replaced on night shift because a resident said he had fingered her, and the Administrator was not aware of the allegation at that time. Despite these reports, the Nursing Home Administrator and acting Director of Nursing stated that they did not consider the allegation regarding Resident 1 to be abuse and documented it only as a grievance. The acting DON stated she was not aware of any sexual abuse allegations, and the Director of Social Services emphatically denied that any abuse occurred, stating she knew there was no abuse and denying that she had been told about digital penetration or inappropriate touching, contrary to other staff accounts. The aide denied touching any residents inappropriately and claimed he could determine wetness by looking at the brief. Across all four residents’ cases, there was no documented evidence that the facility obtained written statements from the residents, from the staff who received the reports, or from staff who interviewed the residents, and no evidence of a thorough investigation including interviews with all pertinent staff to rule out that sexual abuse may have occurred, in violation of facility policy and state regulatory requirements.
Penalty
Resources
Below are regulatory guidelines relevant to this citation:
Trusted data from CMS and state health departments
Every citation, penalty and Plan of Correction is sourced from public CMS records (latest release June 24, 2026) and official state health department websites — never guesswork.
Trusted by long-term care providers and associations.



