Improper Mechanical Lift Sling Use Leads to Resident Fall and Head Injury
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to implement safe mechanical lift transfer practices for a dependent resident, resulting in a fall from a full‑body lift. The resident had a history of CVA with hemiplegia, severe cognitive impairment, expressive aphasia, contractures of multiple extremities, and was dependent on staff for all ADLs and transfers, using a wheelchair for mobility. The care plan directed staff to transfer the resident with a Hoyer‑type full body mechanical lift using a medium sling, with assist of two staff, and to use safe transfer techniques and caution during transfers to prevent striking body parts on hard surfaces. The resident was assessed as a moderate fall risk related to poor communication/comprehension, unawareness of safety needs, and impaired mobility. On the day of the incident, two NAs assisted the resident with a transfer from bed to wheelchair after a bath. A medium cream‑colored sling with dark tan trim was placed under the resident. One NA reported positioning the top of the sling approximately five inches below the resident’s shoulders so that the bottom of the sling covered his bottom, and then crisscrossing the sling between his legs. This placement was later contrasted with the manufacturer’s and facility expectations that the top of the sling be at shoulder level and the bottom approximately two inches below the tailbone so the resident would not sit on the sling. The NAs attached the sling loops to the lift bar; one NA described placing the short black upper loop on the bar and then placing the longer tan loop on top of the black loop (double‑looping), while the other NA described attaching the lower long tan loops and the upper short black loops, using the same color and length on each side. Both NAs reported hearing a “pop” or adjustment sound from the sling while the resident was being raised and stated they stopped and visually rechecked the loops, believing all were attached. The resident was then lifted off the bed with his feet still on the mattress while the lift was pulled back from the bed. One NA moved to the foot of the bed, swung the resident’s feet off the mattress, and supported them as they came off the edge. As the lift was moved away, the sling rotated so that the resident’s back faced the lift and his front faced the window. One NA reported seeing the resident’s weight shift and then observed him fall out of the top right side of the sling, with his upper body and head striking the floor while his legs remained in the sling. The resident sustained a laceration and hematoma to the posterior scalp and a right elbow skin tear with prominent soft tissue swelling, and imaging showed a tiny subarachnoid hemorrhage about the left frontal lobe and contusion/laceration over the right parietal/occipital area without fracture. Interviews with the DON, an RN, and the lift manufacturer’s representative confirmed that correct practice required the sling to be positioned with the top at the shoulders, the bottom below the tailbone, and only one loop of the same color and length attached on each side, and that incorrect sling placement and/or loop attachment could allow a resident to fall from the sling. The facility’s investigation could not conclusively determine the exact mechanism of the fall but acknowledged that human error related to sling placement and/or loop attachment may have contributed.
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