Failure to Prevent Resident-to-Resident Sexual Abuse in a Common Area
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to protect a resident from resident-to-resident sexual abuse. One resident with a known history of inappropriate behaviors and a recent conviction for gross sexual imposition engaged in non-consensual sexual contact with another resident. The facility’s own documentation indicated that this resident required behavioral monitoring, supervision, and intervention to ensure the safety of others, yet he was in a position to have direct, unsupervised access to a cognitively impaired resident in a hallway. The resident identified as the aggressor had multiple medical and psychosocial conditions, including type II diabetes mellitus, hypertension, history of cerebral infarction, altered mental status, muscle weakness, history of falls, and an adjustment disorder with mixed anxiety and depressed mood. Hospital paperwork also documented that he had been incarcerated multiple times and was recently convicted of gross sexual imposition. Despite this history and the documented need for supervision due to inappropriate behaviors, he was able to wheel himself past another resident seated in a wheelchair in the hallway and initiate inappropriate sexual contact. The resident identified as the victim had severe intellectual disabilities, muscle weakness, and intractable localization-related epilepsy with complex partial seizures, and was documented as rarely or never understood with severely impaired cognitive skills for daily decision making. Nursing notes and a self-reported incident described that the aggressor pulled at the elastic waistband of the victim’s pants and brief and placed his hand inside the brief, touching the victim’s private area. A CNA witness corroborated that upon exiting the elevator, he observed the aggressor pulling the victim’s pants and brief out and placing his hand inside to touch the victim’s private area. Staff then intervened and separated the residents. The facility’s abuse prevention policy defined sexual abuse as non-consensual sexual contact of any type and required assessment and supervision of residents with behaviors that may lead to abuse, but the incident occurred despite these policy requirements, resulting in confirmed resident-to-resident sexual abuse. The facility’s investigation, as confirmed by the Administrator and DON, verified that the aggressor was observed pulling at the victim’s pants and brief and inappropriately touching her private area. Nursing documentation indicated that when confronted, the aggressor acknowledged awareness that he was touching someone’s private area and proceeded to make sexually inappropriate and explicit comments to the nurse. The victim, due to baseline cognitive impairment, was unable to provide a reliable account of the incident, but assessments documented no physical signs of trauma and no voiced complaints of pain or discomfort at that time. The combination of the aggressor’s known history and behavioral risks, the victim’s severe cognitive impairment, and the occurrence of non-consensual sexual contact in a common area formed the basis of the cited deficiency for failure to ensure residents were free from abuse. The facility’s abuse prevention policy, dated 08/25/25, required staff to immediately report, investigate, and implement interventions to protect residents from abuse, and further required assessment and supervision of residents with behaviors that may lead to abuse. Despite these written requirements, the incident occurred when the resident with a documented history of inappropriate behaviors and a recent conviction for a sexual offense was able to access and inappropriately touch a cognitively impaired resident in the hallway. The facility’s confirmation of the allegation as resident-to-resident sexual abuse, supported by staff and witness statements and nursing documentation, demonstrates that the facility did not effectively prevent the abusive contact from occurring. This deficiency was cited as past non-compliance that had been corrected prior to the survey, but the underlying incident and investigation findings clearly established that the facility failed to ensure residents were free from resident-to-resident sexual abuse as required by its own policy and regulatory standards.
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