Failure to Provide Timely Post-Fall Assessment, Medication Management, and Safe Call-Light Access
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide necessary care and services, including fall prevention, timely response, and appropriate post-fall assessment, for a newly admitted resident with complex medical conditions. The resident, an older female admitted with grade 4 glioblastoma multiforme status post brain resection, cerebral edema, left hemiparesis after cerebral infarct, CAD with stents, DM, HTN, seizure disorder, arthritis, and a history of multiple falls at home, arrived on 1/16/26. Hospital discharge paperwork listed numerous medications, including antihypertensives, seizure medication, steroids, and others. Facility records showed some medications (dexamethasone and cyclosporine) documented as “medication unavailable” on the evening of admission, and there was no documented medication reconciliation or confirmation with the MD/NP regarding all admission medications. The NP later reported she had not been contacted about the admission or medication review, and the pharmacy reported medications ordered on 1/16/26 were never picked up and were returned to stock after 14 days, with no record of transfer to a closer store. On the evening and night of admission, the resident was documented as having elevated blood pressure (164/100) at 7:57 p.m., with no documented interventions. Interviews indicated the resident exhibited erratic behavior, spoke incoherently, and required frequent assistance, but this behavior was not documented in the nursing notes. CNA and family interviews described that the resident did not consistently use the call light and often called out verbally for help. CNA A reported that the roommate complained about the resident’s noise and requested a room change, and that she asked the resident to quiet down but did not report this behavior to the charge nurse. CNA A stated she assisted the resident to the restroom and back to bed, placing the call light, water, and phone within reach, while the family member later reported the call light was behind the bed and the phone unplugged and out of reach. The family member stated the resident told her she had not received all of her medications that night. In the early morning hours of 1/17/26, the resident experienced a fall. Nursing notes by RN A at 1:20 a.m. documented that the resident was found on the floor, brought back to bed, and had vital signs assessed, with no swelling or bruising initially noted and a small swelling on the left forehead noted 30 minutes later. A later note at 4:18 a.m. documented a change of condition, a fall with a bruise on the left forehead, and transfer to the hospital. However, CNA A reported that when she first found the resident on the floor and notified RN A, he delayed going to the room, stating he needed to enter information in the computer, and that when he arrived, he helped lift the resident back to bed without performing any assessment or vital signs before or immediately after the lift. CNA A stated she did not observe RN A perform neuro checks or vitals, and that the resident’s swelling was not noted until the family arrived. The family member reported receiving a distress call directly from the resident around 1:16 a.m., stating she had fallen, hit her head, and was bleeding, and that no staff had called her. Upon arrival around 1:40 a.m., the family member found CNA A at the nurses’ station on her phone, and then was escorted to the room where CNA A stated she had cleaned blood from the resident’s head and applied a cold towel but had not escalated the issue to the nurse. The family member described a large swollen knot on the resident’s left forehead and stated RN A was initially not in the building and was later found outside in his car. The family member reported that RN A appeared unaware of the head swelling, admitted being overwhelmed and responsible for many residents, and stated that residents fall frequently. The family member also stated that the resident reported not receiving her medications and that RN A said medications would arrive around 3:00 a.m., but no medications arrived by the time EMS transported the resident. Further interviews revealed inconsistencies in RN A’s account of post-fall care. RN A stated he took vital signs after putting the resident back in bed and completed neuro checks every 15 minutes, documenting them either on sticky notes or in nursing notes, but he could not clearly recall the method. He also stated he could not remember if he checked whether the resident was on anticoagulants before moving her and acknowledged he did not perform range-of-motion assessment while the resident was on the floor. The NP reported receiving no call or message about the fall or head injury, and the MD/NP had no record of being notified at the time of the incident. EMS records documented significantly elevated blood pressures during transport. The administrator later stated that the expectation for an unwitnessed fall is to perform an assessment, neuro checks, and vital signs before lifting the resident from the floor and to notify the family and physician immediately afterward, which contrasted with the actions described in staff and family interviews. The facility’s own investigation summary noted that the family member alleged verbal abuse by CNA A, including telling the resident to go to sleep because she was bothering the roommate, and alleged that the resident had not received all her medications on the night of admission. CNA A confirmed asking the resident to quiet down due to the roommate’s complaints but denied verbal abuse. The DON acknowledged that the resident’s disruptive behavior was not documented and that the LVN who received the resident should have completed a medication review with the MD or NP. The facility’s Promoting/Maintaining Resident Dignity policy required staff to treat residents with respect, pay attention to residents as individuals, and speak respectfully, but the family’s allegations and staff interviews described interactions and omissions that did not align with these expectations. Overall, the report documents failures in fall prevention measures, timely response to a resident in distress, post-fall assessment and monitoring, medication reconciliation and availability, and communication with the family and practitioner, all contributing to the cited quality of care deficiency.
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