Resident Injury from Bed Rail Assist Bar
Summary
The facility failed to prevent an accident involving a resident who was on anticoagulant medication, Eliquis, and sustained a severe injury from a bed rail assist bar. The resident, who had severe cognitive impairment, impaired vision, and required substantial assistance with bed mobility, was found with a large hematoma and bruising on her left arm, which later ruptured, causing an open wound with uncontrolled bleeding. The injury was discovered during routine rounds by a nurse, who noted the resident's arm was swollen and discolored, but the resident did not complain of pain. The nurse did not initially inform the on-call nurse practitioner that the resident was on anticoagulant medication, which could have influenced the severity of the injury. The resident's care plan included the use of a bed rail assist bar to aid with bed mobility due to left-sided weakness from a stroke. However, the resident was unable to reposition herself in bed and required total staff assistance. Interviews with staff revealed that the resident's arm was often seen pressed against the bed rail assist bar during care, and the location of the injury correlated with the position of the bed rail. The facility's investigation determined that the bed rail assist bar was the likely cause of the injury, as there was nothing else in the bed that could have caused such damage. The resident was transferred to the hospital for treatment of the injury, where it was confirmed that the hematoma and subsequent skin tear were likely caused by pressure from the bed rail. The resident's condition was exacerbated by her use of Eliquis, which increased her risk of bleeding. The facility's failure to recognize the risks associated with the resident's use of the bed rail assist bar, given her medical conditions and medication, contributed to the accident.
Removal Plan
- Resident #1 was reassessed for use of bed rails. The Assessment revealed that the resident was not able to utilize the Assist Side Rails without staff prompting, and this put her at further risk for injury as well as her having vision impairment, dementia, diagnosis of muscle weakness and being on a blood thinning medication.
- Assist Side Rail was removed from Resident #1's bed.
- The Director of Nursing, Administrator and clinical team completed a root cause analysis for this event and determined Resident #1 had an assist side rail which contributed to an injury.
- Nursing leadership (which included the Director of Nursing and Unit Managers) in conjunction with the Wound Care Nurse Practitioner completed 100% audit of all current residents with Assist Side Rails in use, for skin integrity to ensure no other injuries related to assist rails. No injuries noted.
- Nursing Staff, including nurses and Certified Nursing Assistants (CNAs), including agency staff were educated by the Director of Nursing and Staff Development Coordinator (SDC) regarding bed mobility and ensuring resident's safety with bed rails.
- Education also included an assessment of bed rails for residents to ensure residents safety with use, to include review of vision status, bed mobility, cognitive status and medications which put resident at risk.
- Nurses Aides were educated on bed mobility and observing for changes and any concerns related to residents' use of side rails, ie: leaning on them, limbs against them/through them, resting head against rails, not being able to grasp independently). If they note any concerns with safety to report to the charge nurse immediately.
- This education is ongoing with no staff working until education is completed.
- Director of Nursing and/or Designee will ensure new hires or agency staff receive the education.
- The Director of Nursing is responsible for tracking and educating staff who were not educated. This education was completed in person.
- The Administrator and Director of Nursing made the decision to implement a weekly audit. Audits of residents with Assist Side Rails X 4 weeks, then quarterly.
Penalty
Resources
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