Failure to Use AFO and Gait Belt During Early-Morning Weighing Resulting in Resident Fall
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to prevent a fall and ensure that a resident’s prescribed left foot Ankle Foot Orthosis (AFO) and a gait belt were applied prior to standing the resident for a weight measurement. On the date of the incident at approximately 4:00–6:00 AM, a CNA, at the direction of an LPN, woke the resident to obtain a weight, despite the resident stating he was tired and did not want to get up. The resident reported that he needed to sit for about 10 minutes before standing due to blood pressure concerns, but he was transferred from bed to a wheelchair and then taken to a weight room across from the therapy office. The CNA later stated this was the first resident weight she had obtained since being hired and that she worked the night shift. Record review showed that the resident had multiple medical diagnoses, including hemiplegia and hemiparesis affecting the left non-dominant side after an intracerebral hemorrhage, orthostatic hypotension, diabetes, anemia, heart disease, and a history of left hip fracture. The resident’s care plan documented that he required assistance from one staff member for ambulation with a two-wheeled walker and left foot AFO, and that he received physical therapy for gait training and neuromuscular re-education. Therapy staff documented that the resident had left foot drop and required the left leg AFO and a gait belt to stand. The fall care plan identified recurrent falls and conditions such as CVA with left hemiplegia, dizziness, fatigue, and orthostatic hypotension, with interventions including transferring and changing positions slowly. During the incident, the CNA took the resident, who was barefoot and without his AFO or a gait belt, to a wheelchair platform scale in a small weight room that had only one handrail on the back of the scale. The CNA had the resident stand on the scale, and he began to fall backwards against the wall. The CNA was unable to lift him and left to get the LPN. When the nurse arrived, the resident was on the floor. The nurse’s incident report documented that the resident lost his footing on the weight scale as he was being assisted back to his wheelchair, and that no injuries were noted at that time. The resident later reported that he started to black out, fell backwards, landed on his left foot/leg, hurt his knee, and that his left big toe was bleeding. The DON stated that she did not interview the CNA or the resident and that no witness statements were obtained, and she characterized the follow-up as not a “huge investigation,” relying only on speaking with the nurse and reviewing the plan of care. Further interviews and record reviews confirmed that the resident typically used a seated chair scale located elsewhere on the unit and that, according to the resident, staff usually weighed him using that chair scale or by subtracting the wheelchair weight. The CNA acknowledged that the resident was barefoot and that she did not apply his leg splint (AFO) or use a gait belt when standing him on the scale. The LPN stated that the resident needed daily weights and that she had explained to him the severity of not getting weighed, and she believed he had yellow gripper socks on, although the CNA and resident reported he was barefoot. The facility’s fall policy stated that staff would identify interventions related to residents’ specific risks and causes to try to prevent falls and minimize complications, and defined a fall as unintentionally coming to rest on the ground, floor, or other lower level. The resident’s left knee x-ray obtained two days later documented mild osteoarthritis with clinical information of pain. The DON reported that residents were not typically awakened at that early hour solely for weights and that she believed weights could be done at any time during the day shift. However, the resident’s weight log showed a standing weight recorded shortly before 6:00 AM on the date of the incident. The DON also stated that she did not speak with the CNA or the resident about the fall and that no witness statements were collected. The lack of use of the resident’s prescribed AFO and gait belt, the decision to obtain a standing weight on a platform scale in a room with limited support surfaces, and the incomplete investigation and documentation of the event were all identified as contributing factors to the fall and the failure to ensure the area was free from accident hazards and that adequate supervision and assistive devices were used to prevent accidents.
Penalty
Resources
Below are regulatory guidelines relevant to this citation:
Trusted data from CMS and state health departments
Every citation, penalty and Plan of Correction is sourced from public CMS records (latest release June 24, 2026) and official state health department websites — never guesswork.
Trusted by long-term care providers and associations.



