GENERAL INCIDENT REPORTING
General Incident Reporting ensures safety, compliance, and
early intervention. Not all incidents are sentinel events, but many
sentinel events start as general incident.
General Incident: Safety, clinical, operational, or compliance concern without death or permanent harm
Sentinel Incident: Death, suicide attempt, or serious permanent harm requiring immediate escalation.
Mandated Reporting Incidents: Any situation in which a staff member has reasonable cause to suspect that a client or another individual is experiencing abuse, neglect, exploitation, or imminent danger, and the law requires the staff member to make a report to the appropriate authority
(e.g., Child Protective Services, Adult Protective Services, or law
enforcement), regardless of whether the concern is confirmed. We will cover this later in this training!
KEY RULE: Report any event impacting safety, care or compliance, including:
Client injury, fall, escalation
Medication errors or adverse reactions
Aggression, threats, or boundary concerns
HIPAA/privacy concerns
Staff injury or impairment
Facility or safety issues
Immediate Staff Response Should be:
Ensure safety
Notify supervisor or management
Call emergency services if needed
Complete and submit Incident Report (located in LS Library) within 24 hours to Executive Management.
All
incident reports are confidential. Staff who report concerns in good
faith will not face retaliation. Reports are reviewed by management for
quality and safety improvement and may result in additional training,
policy updates, or changes to a client’s care plan when appropriate.
SENTINEL INCIDENT REPORTING
Sentinel
Events are unexpected occurrences involving the death or serious
physical or psychological injury, or risk of one of those. These are to
be reported to the admin and clinical director immediately. A “Sentinel
Event Review” is conducted involving evaluation of incident, root cause
analysis and future action plans.
IMPORTANT
NOTE: When an incident involves abuse or neglect, serious injury,
illness or death, and/or violation of the provider Code of Conduct, Life
Stone is obligated to Notify the Office of Licensing, legally
responsible person and any applicable agency, which may include law
enforcement AND Submit a preliminary written report to the Office of
Licensing within 24 hours of the incident.
CLIENT GRIEVANCES
Client
Grievances & Procedures: Clients have a right to make complaints
about their treatment. They shall be encouraged, whenever possible, to
take complaints first to their provider, and thereafter to follow the
lines of supervision or office management if the complaint is not
addressed correctly.
Grievance
Reviews: Life Stone management shall function as client advocates
ensuring that complaints are acknowledged, reviewed and where possible,
resolved. This process will be documented in eCharts as a Case
Management Note.
STAFF GRIEVANCES
Staff
members are encouraged to raise concerns related to workplace issues,
professional conduct, policies, or employment practices in a timely and
respectful manner. Whenever possible, staff should first address
concerns directly with the involved individual or their immediate
supervisor. If the concern remains unresolved, staff may escalate the
issue to Life Stone management.
Life
Stone is committed to maintaining a professional, respectful, and
supportive work environment. All staff grievances will be reviewed
promptly and handled with discretion. Appropriate steps will be taken to
address concerns, and actions taken will be documented in accordance
with organizational policy.