Failure to Implement Fall and Accident Prevention Measures and Conduct Thorough Post-Fall Investigations
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure residents received adequate supervision and assistance devices to prevent accidents, and failure to conduct thorough post-incident investigations to determine root causes. One resident was admitted with multiple fall risk factors, including Parkinson’s disease, orthostatic hypotension, a history of falls, recent hospitalization for syncope and hypotension, and a documented significant decline in functional status requiring maximal assistance with transfers and ambulation per hospital therapy assessments. On admission, the facility’s own fall risk evaluation scored this resident at a high-risk level, and the admission assessment documented unsteady gait, prior falls, intermittent confusion associated with hypotensive episodes, and some forgetfulness. Despite this, the facility did not initiate a high-risk fall care plan or resident-specific fall interventions as directed by its fall mitigation policy, and no interventions were triggered from the admission assessment. During the first night after admission, the resident experienced seizure-like activity with unresponsiveness, after which staff documented confusion and, per CNA interview, wandering in the hallway requiring redirection back to the room. Staff reported this information in shift report, including that the resident had been trying to self-transfer and was wandering. The following morning, an LPN starting the day shift found the resident on the floor in the room with a large hematoma above the left eye, blood on the face and floor, and multiple skin tears, and documented that the resident reported dizziness and had an initial low blood pressure. The facility’s risk management entry described the resident on the floor between the bed and bathroom door, a spilled urinal on the floor, the bedside table pushed toward the bathroom doorway, bare feet with slippers on the floor, and the call light not engaged. However, the investigation did not document when the resident was last seen, when the resident was last toileted or assisted, or obtain statements from prior-shift staff, despite those staff having information about the resident’s confusion, wandering, and self-transfer attempts. The IDT note later stated the resident was self-transferring and/or slipped out of bed while using a urinal and that the care plan was followed, even though no fall care plan had been initiated at the time of the fall. Another resident with dementia, a history of falling, CKD, depression, syncope and collapse, osteoporosis, and osteoarthritis had been assessed as high risk for falls and had a fall care plan that included bilateral floor mats, pillows on both sides of the bed, a body pillow to simulate a spouse, a low bed, nonskid socks, and assistance with toileting. This resident experienced a witnessed fall when sliding from a chair in a TV area while adjusting position; documentation and subsequent interviews indicated the resident was fidgety, had just returned from an activity, and was wearing shoes, but the original fall investigation did not record what was on the resident’s feet, when the resident was last toileted, when the resident was last seen before the fall, or why the resident was shifting or reaching forward. The post-fall evaluation’s contributing factors section was left blank at the time and only later hand-completed as an addendum. Additionally, during multiple observations, the surveyor noted that this resident did not have all care-planned fall interventions in place, including missing one floor mat, the body pillow, and pillows on both sides of the bed. Across these events, the facility did not follow its fall mitigation policy requiring immediate initiation of prevention protocols for high-risk residents, did not consistently implement existing fall care plan interventions, and did not complete thorough post-fall investigations to identify accurate root causes. A third resident sustained a burn from hot soup served by facility staff, and the facility had not completed a hot liquid assessment prior to the burn. When observed by the surveyor, this resident did not have the hot liquid and fall care plan interventions in place. A fourth resident, also assessed as high risk for falls, had a fall that was not thoroughly investigated to determine a root cause, and the surveyor observed that this resident did not have fall prevention care plan interventions in place. For these residents, the report notes that the facility did not ensure each resident received adequate supervision and assistance devices to prevent accidents, and that fall or accident investigations were incomplete, lacking key information such as last toileting, last observation time, and contributing environmental or clinical factors, which prevented accurate determination of root causes.
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