Failure to Respond to Door Alarm and Inadequate Supervision of High Fall-Risk Resident
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide adequate supervision and prevent accidents for two residents identified as being at risk for elopement and falls. One resident with encephalopathy, dementia, gait difficulties, severely impaired cognition, and a documented history of wandering and elopement risk was care planned with an electronic monitoring device, hourly monitoring of location, and interventions for wandering and exit-seeking. Despite these measures, on the evening of 03/25/2026, this resident was last seen at dinner asking about their truck and car, then left the unit through an alarmed fire exit door. Camera footage showed the resident walking down the hallway, passing the fire door, turning back, and exiting through the fire door. The fire door alarm sounded, but staff did not respond to the alarm for several minutes. During the period after the alarm sounded, multiple staff were present on the unit but did not immediately investigate the source of the alarm. Statements from CNAs and LPNs indicated that some staff were in resident rooms with loud radios or televisions and did not hear the alarm, while another LPN was at the nurses’ station giving medications. One CNA reported being unfamiliar with the sound of the fire door alarm and, seeing an LPN at the nurses’ station not reacting, continued with resident care instead of checking the alarm. The alarm panel later showed the alert was from the hallway where the fire door was located. When an LPN returning from a CPR class finally checked the alarm panel and went to the fire door, the resident was found lying on the ground in the parking lot approximately 114 feet from the door, with a laceration to the forehead and abrasions to the nose, cheeks, shoulder, and knees, and was subsequently evaluated in the emergency department. The second resident involved in the deficiency had renal failure, was on dialysis, had rib fractures related to a prior fall, and was assessed as high risk for falls with multiple recent falls documented. The resident’s care plan identified them as high risk for falls and included interventions such as remaining in the dining room in view of staff, use of Dycem in the wheelchair, encouragement to use the call bell, and a low bed. On the morning of 04/07/2026, this resident was seated in a wheelchair in the dining room with visible bruising under both eyes and on the forehead from a prior fall. Video footage showed that a CNA, who had agreed to supervise the resident and was aware of the high fall risk, sat at a table by a window looking at their phone and out the window while the resident sat in a wheelchair in the center of the room, out of arm’s reach. The footage further showed the resident intermittently leaning forward in the wheelchair while the CNA remained seated away from the resident and did not reposition them closer or provide active supervision. At approximately 6:51 AM, the resident leaned forward and fell out of the wheelchair onto the floor in the dining room. The fall was unwitnessed in the sense that no staff were immediately at the resident’s side; the resident was later found on the floor in front of the wheelchair, lying on their right side, with a large raised bump on the right forehead. Nursing notes documented that the resident stated they tried to walk and fell. The DON later confirmed that the CNA should have been supervising the resident more closely and not looking at their phone and out the window while responsible for monitoring this high fall-risk resident.
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