Failure to Prevent Falls and Use Safe Transfer and Positioning Practices
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to maintain an accident‑hazard‑free environment and provide adequate supervision and appropriate transfer methods, resulting in serious injuries to two residents. For Resident H, who had vertigo, a prior left femur fracture, dementia with impaired safety awareness, muscle weakness, and a history of falls, the care plan specified that she required extensive assistance with toileting by 1–2 staff, total assistance of two staff with transfers using a mechanical lift, and use of a wheelchair. Her fall‑risk care plan also included interventions such as encouraging her to lie down after breakfast and between meals, assisting her to bed if restless or tired, and promptly responding to all requests for assistance. Despite these documented needs and interventions, she was transferred without a mechanical lift and without the required number of staff. On the morning in question, CNA 10 reported that Resident H was still in bed and that, while attempting to get her up before breakfast, the resident fell backwards into the bed. CNA 10 then attempted to transfer the resident to a chair; during this attempt, the resident went down to the floor and was “lowered” there by CNA 10, who then called QMA 11 for help to get the resident off the floor. QMA 11 confirmed that she was called to help lift the resident from the floor and that they lifted the resident by placing their arms under the resident’s armpits and pulling her up by her pants, rather than using a mechanical lift. CNA 10 stated she did not know the resident was having problems standing and believed QMA 11 was a nurse. The DON later indicated that the resident was a Hoyer‑lift transfer and that she had been lifted by one person when she should have been transferred with a mechanical lift, and also stated that a resident “lowered to the floor” was not considered a fall. Following this event, Resident H began to exhibit pain. CNA 10 reported that later in the shift, the resident started to complain of leg pain, and this was reported to RN 9, although RN 9 stated she was not informed of pain on that date and only became aware of the resident’s pain two days later, when staff reported it to her. When RN 9 assessed the resident, she noted guarding of the leg and pain with movement, and the resident screamed when her leg was lifted. Imaging revealed a fracture of the neck of the left femur with an acute impacted intertrochanteric fracture and an acute nondisplaced left superior pubic ramus fracture. The facility reported the event as an injury of unknown origin, but staff statements and interviews showed that the resident had been transferred contrary to her care plan and without appropriate equipment or staffing, and that the event in which she was “lowered to the floor” was not treated or documented as a fall. For Resident C, the deficiency involved failure to ensure personal items were kept within safe reach, consistent with the resident’s care plan and standard fall precautions. Resident C was dependent on staff for all ADLs and had a care plan identifying them as high risk for falls, with interventions including anticipating and meeting needs, ensuring personal items were within reach, and placing a fall mat next to the bed. LPN 5 and RN 6 described standard fall precautions as keeping residents’ personal items on a bedside table within reach, and, for residents with limited range of motion, placing items on an over‑bed table directly in front of them. The DON agreed with this description of standard fall precautions and the requirement to keep personal items within reach. On the day of Resident C’s fall, a CNA had been in the room getting the resident situated and then left to assist another resident. Shortly afterward, the roommate yelled for Resident C to stop moving around in bed or they would fall, and the CNA called for LPN 5. When LPN 5 arrived, Resident C was found face down on the floor beside the bed, between the bed and the bedside table. LPN 5 indicated that the bedside table appeared to be parallel to the bed rather than positioned over it, and Resident C stated they had flipped off the bed while trying to reach their personal cell phone on the bedside table. LPN 5 described Resident C as having recently gained some range of motion in the lower arms but with very poor control, comparing the arm movements from the elbows down to a “fish out of water,” floppy and uncontrolled. The resident was observed with a knot on the forehead and was immediately sent to the hospital, where they were diagnosed with an acute head injury and bilateral subdural hematomas. The record lacked documentation of the resident’s subsequent status or plans to return to the facility. The facility’s own Falls and Fall Risk policy defined a fall as unintentionally coming to rest on the ground, floor, or other lower level, including episodes where a resident would have fallen if not caught or lowered, and stated that when a resident is found on the floor, a fall is considered to have occurred unless there is evidence otherwise. Despite this, the DON stated that a resident lowered to the floor was not considered a fall. In both residents’ cases, the facility did not follow its own fall‑risk policy and resident‑specific care plans: Resident H was transferred without the required mechanical lift and staffing, and the event in which she was lowered to the floor was not treated as a fall, while Resident C’s personal items were not maintained within safe reach, contributing to the resident’s attempt to reach a cell phone and subsequent fall from bed.
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