Insufficient Staffing and Supervision for High Fall-Risk, Cognitively Impaired Residents
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide sufficient nursing staff and adequate supervision for residents at high risk for falls, particularly those with dementia and impaired safety awareness, even when they were placed in front of the nurses’ station for closer monitoring. One resident with advanced dementia, severe cognitive impairment (BIMS score of 3/15), a history of multiple prior falls, impulsive behavior, inability to follow directions, and inability to use the call light purposefully was repeatedly brought out of his room at night and placed in a wheelchair in front of the nurses’ station for supervision. Video footage showed that from midnight to 5 a.m. he remained in front of the nurses’ station, and beginning around 5 a.m. he made repeated attempts to stand from his wheelchair. The nurse intermittently intervened to sit him back down but then left his side to perform other tasks, during which time he immediately tried to get up again. At one point, with the nurse’s back turned while she was occupied with other duties inside the nurses’ station, the resident stood and fell forward out of camera view, sustaining two forehead lacerations and later being diagnosed with a C1 cervical fracture. Staff, including the LPN, DSD, and unit manager, acknowledged that this resident could not follow instructions, could not use the call light meaningfully, was highly impulsive, and required someone next to him when agitated and attempting to stand, but his fall care plans did not include individualized or specific supervision interventions. Another resident with Alzheimer’s disease, dementia, difficulty walking, muscle weakness, and a BIMS score of 5/15 had a long history of falls, including multiple unwitnessed falls in her room and in common areas. She was cognitively impaired, frail, and had poor safety awareness, often attempting to transfer or change positions without asking for help despite being able to follow directions and use the call light. Progress notes documented several falls, including an unwitnessed fall in front of the nurses’ station while staff were giving report, during which she fell from her wheelchair and later was found to have sustained a compression fracture of the lumbar spine (L1–L2). Staff interviews indicated that this resident needed monitoring at least every 15 minutes because she would get up without asking for assistance, but CNAs reported they were responsible for large assignments, had multiple residents needing showers and mechanical lifts, and did not have enough staff to provide that level of supervision. The resident’s care plan after an unwitnessed fall included an intervention to place her at the nurses’ station when up in a wheelchair, yet she continued to have unwitnessed falls, including one in front of the nurses’ station and another in the dining room. The facility also failed to provide consistent supervision for multiple cognitively impaired, high fall-risk residents who were lined up in wheelchairs in front of the nurses’ stations on two units. On Unit B, with a census of 33 residents and only one nurse and two CNAs on duty, several residents with dementia, Alzheimer’s disease, and prior falls were observed seated in front of the nurses’ station in the early morning hours. The lights at the nurses’ station were off, the computers were off, and no staff were present within visual range; the nurse was down the hall at the medication cart and could not see the residents, while CNAs were in and out of rooms performing care. Staff stated that these residents were placed there for close supervision and that some were known fall risks, but also reported there were not enough staff to provide close supervision. On Unit A, with 40 residents and one nurse with three CNAs on night shift, multiple residents with dementia, Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, prior fractures, and histories of falls were similarly placed in front of the nurses’ station for supervision. Staff, including CNAs and a unit manager, reported that residents placed at the nurses’ station required frequent monitoring (e.g., every 15 minutes) due to confusion, restlessness, and poor safety awareness, but acknowledged that staffing levels were insufficient to meet these supervision needs for all residents requiring increased monitoring. Across these events, the facility’s own fall logs showed 46 falls between 1/1/26 and 3/30/26, 34 of which were unwitnessed, including unwitnessed falls for residents specifically identified as high risk and placed at the nurses’ station for supervision. Staff interviews repeatedly described being too busy with medication passes, showers, changing briefs, and shift report to continuously observe residents seated at the nurses’ station. Nurses and CNAs stated there was no designated staff member assigned solely to supervise these residents, and that requests for additional staff were met with statements that no staff were available. Unit managers and the DSD acknowledged that there had been no assessment to determine specific supervision needs for at least one high-risk resident and that care plans lacked individualized supervision interventions, despite staff recognizing that certain residents required 1:1 or very frequent monitoring when awake and attempting to stand. Family and physician interviews further described the residents’ conditions and needs at the time of the incidents. Family members of the resident with the C1 fracture reported that he was confused, had back pain, became agitated at night, had weak legs, and had fallen many times, and that staff had told them the facility was short staffed. The resident’s physician confirmed he had very advanced dementia, could not articulate pain, and had sustained a neck fracture from the fall. For the second resident, hospital documentation confirmed the lumbar compression fracture following a fall from her wheelchair. Facility leadership and staff acknowledged that residents were placed in front of the nurses’ station specifically for close supervision due to their cognitive impairment and fall risk, yet observations and interviews showed that consistent, adequate supervision was not provided because nursing staff were occupied with other tasks and staffing levels were insufficient to meet the supervision needs of all high-risk residents placed there.
Penalty
Resources
Below are regulatory guidelines relevant to this citation:
Trusted data from CMS and state health departments
Every citation, penalty and Plan of Correction is sourced from public CMS records (latest release June 24, 2026) and official state health department websites — never guesswork.
Trusted by long-term care providers and associations.



