Failure to Prevent and Monitor Resident-to-Resident Sexual Abuse and Incomplete Behavior Tracking
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to protect residents from abuse and to maintain an environment free from sexual abuse, particularly for cognitively impaired residents with known behavioral issues. One resident with Alzheimer’s disease and severe cognitive impairment had documented verbal and physical behaviors toward others, including potential sexual abuse, and a care plan noting a history of inappropriately grabbing staff and requiring cares in pairs due to sexually inappropriate behavior. Despite this, behavior monitoring for this resident was frequently incomplete, with large portions of behavior tracking entries missing across multiple months. The resident’s sexually inappropriate behavior toward staff was known to staff, but the facility did not consistently document or monitor these behaviors as required. On one occasion, a CNA observed a severely cognitively impaired resident crying in the dining room after supper while another cognitively impaired resident with a history of sexually inappropriate behavior appeared to be comforting the crying resident. After briefly turning away to remove meal trays, the CNA turned back and observed the second resident’s hand inside the first resident’s shirt, grabbing the resident’s right breast. The CNA had to physically remove the resident’s hand from the other resident’s breast and then returned the resident to their room. The incident was reported to nursing staff, and the crying resident remained tearful but calmed somewhat when given a stuffed animal. The crying resident had a care plan for hallucinations, agitation, wandering into other residents’ rooms, striking out, and crying unprovoked, but the care plan was not updated with any new preventative safety measures following this incident, nor did it include a care plan for past trauma, despite the activated POAHC later reporting a history of sexual assault and increased crying and wandering since the event. The facility’s investigation of the breast-touching incident documented the CNA’s account but did not result in documented preventative safety measures for either resident involved. The investigation did not address the crying resident’s frequent tearfulness, wandering, or intrusive behaviors, nor did it include safety measures to protect other residents from the sexually inappropriate behaviors of the resident who grabbed the breast. Behavior tracking for the resident with known sexually inappropriate behavior showed multiple missing or incomplete entries, and the medical record lacked complete documentation of 1:1 supervision, including missing entries for at least one day and no documentation of when 1:1 supervision was discontinued. Staff interviews confirmed awareness of the resident’s sexually inappropriate behavior toward staff and the crying resident’s frequent tearfulness and wandering, but there was no evidence that these known risks were incorporated into updated care plans or consistent monitoring. A second deficiency involved another resident with vascular dementia, behavioral disturbance, bipolar disorder, anxiety, depression, traumatic brain injury, and a documented history of hypersexual behaviors. This resident’s care plan did not include a history of inappropriate sexual behavior prior to an incident in which a CNA observed the resident in another cognitively impaired resident’s room, positioned in a wheelchair facing the other resident and touching the other resident’s private area inside the upper thigh. The CNA removed the resident from the room and reported the incident to the nurse. Staff interviews indicated that this resident had a history of sexually touching self in front of others, being verbally and physically inappropriate with female staff, and targeting and fixating on the same resident whose room the resident entered, requiring frequent redirection away from that resident. The facility’s investigation of the thigh-touching incident included written statements from staff who had observed the hypersexual resident attempting to enter the targeted resident’s room and going into other residents’ rooms, but the care plan still did not reflect the resident’s history of targeting that specific resident. Behavior tracking for this resident, which was supposed to monitor sexually inappropriate verbal or physical touch and increased wandering every shift, was also frequently incomplete, with a high percentage of missing or incomplete entries across several months. Although the resident was receiving medications for hypersexual behaviors, the lack of thorough behavior monitoring and behavior tracking, combined with the absence of care plan interventions addressing the resident’s targeting of another resident, contributed to the failure to adequately supervise and protect vulnerable residents from sexual abuse by a resident with a known history of inappropriate sexual behavior.
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.



