An assisted-living facility in Rogers is being blamed for leaving an elderly client alone in a courtyard on an unseasonably hot afternoon and then realizing he had been there for hours under the hot sun and suffering from heat stroke.
The exposure, which violated the client's care instructions, left the resident at The Wellstead of Rogers with a temperature of roughly 105 degrees nearly two hours after being brought inside, according to a Health Department report released Thursday.
The resident, who was not allowed "to go outside alone," was taken to a hospital emergency room in critical condition and was expected to suffer increased risk of "cognitive decline," the report added.
"The client was unsupervised in a secure courtyard for an unknown amount of time when temperatures reached a maximum of 91 degrees," the report read, "and the client became unresponsive."
Investigators learned from staff members that the memory-care unit was short-staffed during that afternoon last year, with one nurse and one nurse's assistant on duty, and that it was dealing with "many visitors," according to the report.
The nurse on duty also was covering for another unit in the facility that was without licensed staff.
In assigning responsibility to the facility, the report noted that The Wellstead of Rogers did not have procedures in place for the safe and supervised use of the courtyards by its residents. One employee told health officials that staff members "can use their discretion to override the locking mechanism on the door so clients can come and go from the courtyard."
A follow-up visit by health officials in December found that the facility corrected its shortcomings.