Resident Injured After Being Transported Without Proper Wheelchair Restraint in Facility Van
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure a resident was properly secured during transport in the facility van, resulting in the resident sliding out of a manual wheelchair onto the vehicle floor and sustaining injuries. The resident was an older female with multiple diagnoses including end stage renal disease, abnormal bone density, prior left shoulder dislocation, chronic pain, osteoarthritis, and a nondisplaced fracture of the right third metatarsal. Her MDS showed intact cognition (BIMS 13), dependence for transfers, and use of a motorized wheelchair, with a manual wheelchair used for certain transports. On the day of the incident, she was transported to and from dialysis by the facility’s primary driver in the facility van, using a manual wheelchair because her motorized wheelchair could not be accommodated. According to the resident’s statements and facility interviews, the driver anchored the wheelchair to the van floor using the manual floor anchors but did not secure the resident with a seat belt or cross belt. The resident reported that during the return trip from dialysis she slid completely out of the wheelchair onto the van floor and remained there until arrival back at the facility. The driver stated she had strapped all four buckles to the wheelchair and, when approaching an intersection and braking as the light changed, heard the resident say she was slipping; she reported reaching back to try to prevent further slipping but the resident slid off the mechanical lift pad and landed on her bottom. The administrator and facility driver (maintenance) both indicated that the wheelchair had been anchored but the cross belt or safety belt securing the resident was not used or not properly engaged, despite the van being equipped with safety straps, anchors, and a passenger seat belt and shoulder harness for wheelchair users as required by facility policy and federal ADA transportation specifications. The incident was documented as an unwitnessed fall occurring in the facility van, with the resident found sitting on the van floor and the wheelchair behind her when the vehicle arrived back at the facility. Initial nursing assessment documented no visible injuries, but the resident complained of right leg pain and later generalized pain with a pain score of 6. X‑rays obtained after the incident showed an acute fracture in the neck of the right third metatarsal, and the resident subsequently complained of left shoulder pain, with imaging later identifying a chronic dislocation of the left shoulder. The facility’s policies required that each resident transported in the van be secured in a seat with a seatbelt or in a wheelchair secured with tie‑downs, and that staff authorized to drive the van have necessary training and knowledge of van safety features. Surveyor review of personnel and training records showed that only the two designated transport staff had recently received in‑service education on transporting residents, that the primary driver had a prior transportation skills checklist on file, and that another authorized staff member’s file lacked a transportation skills checklist, while some historical driver safety records were missing after a change in maintenance leadership. These findings, combined with the resident’s account and staff interviews, supported that the resident was not properly secured with a seat belt during transport, leading to the fall from the wheelchair and resulting injuries.
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