Improper Wheelchair Transport Positioning Resulting in Tibial Fracture
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure a resident was properly positioned and supervised while being transported in a wheelchair, resulting in injury. The resident had a history of cerebral infarction with right-sided hemiplegia/hemiparesis, aphasia, chronic psychosis, and was non-ambulatory, requiring extensive assistance for mobility and a Hoyer lift for transfers. His care plan noted hemiplegia related to stroke and dependence on staff for most activities of daily living. On the day of the incident, he was transported by a facility transporter to an outside physician appointment in a wheelchair. At the physician’s office, the resident arrived in a van and was placed in a wheelchair by the transporter. Office staff observed the transporter appearing upset, stating he was having a bad day with the patient, and yelling in the resident’s face while flailing his arms. The resident’s legs were not in the wheelchair footrests at any time during the visit, and his right leg repeatedly hit the ground while he was being pushed. Staff at the office noted the wheelchair appeared too small for the resident, that his right leg was elevated on a pillow but kept falling off, and that he complained of pain when his leg was moved and winced in pain during handling. The aide accompanying the resident to the appointment did not have information about the resident’s health history, status, or complaints, and the physician obtained history from records sent with the referral. Upon return to the facility that afternoon, multiple staff reported that the resident had slid down in his wheelchair on the transport bus. The ADON, called to the bus for assistance, observed the resident leaning back with his buttocks slightly slid forward, both feet firmly on the ground, and his leg resting against the metal part of the wheelchair/leg rests; she did not see any injuries or hear complaints of pain at that time. Later that night, a CNA discovered a large bruise and fluid-filled sac on the resident’s right lower extremity, and an LPN documented an extensive bruise and open area with serosanguineous drainage. The DON assessed the injury and documented that the placement of the bruise and blister lined up with the leg having pressed against the footrest/metal part of the wheelchair during the transport incident. Subsequent hospital evaluation identified an acute, nondisplaced transverse fracture of the proximal right tibial metaphysis, with hospital records listing a fall during transfer and right tibia fracture, and the resident was treated for the fracture and associated soft tissue injury. Physician documentation after the incident stated that, based on the description of how the resident was found and his flaccid right side, he had slid in the chair and his right lower extremity had been up against the leg rest during transport, causing a bruise clearly from pressure of the leg rest on his very flaccid leg. The physician further stated that if he was slipping the whole trip and hitting the leg rest, a hard enough repeated blow could have damaged the bone. The DON confirmed in interview that she believed the injury occurred during the transport, when the resident’s leg was against the wheelchair on the transportation bus. Other staff, including CNAs and the Ombudsman, reported being told that the resident had a fall or incident on the transport bus and later observed the significant bruising, scabbed area, and leg brace after hospital evaluation. These observations and records collectively support that the resident, who could not move or protect his right leg, was not properly positioned or secured in the wheelchair during transport, allowing his leg to press against the leg rests and his foot to repeatedly strike the ground, leading to bruising, skin injury, infection, and a right tibial fracture.
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