Failure to Implement and Document Fall-Related Interventions and Assessments
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure the environment was free from accident hazards and that residents received adequate supervision and care to prevent or minimize injuries from falls, as required by facility policies on documentation, care plan revision upon status change, and the fall prevention program. The facility’s policies required licensed staff and the interdisciplinary team to document all assessments and services in the medical record, to review and revise care plans after a status change, and to implement fall interventions based on fall risk, including environmental measures and monitoring of vital signs. Despite these policies, surveyors identified multiple instances where fall-related interventions were not resident-centered, physician orders were not fully implemented, and required assessments were incomplete or missing. For one resident with a history of a fall and a documented unwitnessed fall with a bump on the left forehead, the care plan created after the fall did not include interventions for bilateral floor mats, even though therapy documentation showed the bed was lowered and bedside mats and an additional mattress were in place. Observations on two separate days showed the resident in bed with a fall mattress on one side and a floor mat on the other side of the bed. During interview and record review, the DON confirmed there was no physician order or care plan intervention for floor mats and stated the resident was not supposed to have floor mats because a big boy bed had been implemented instead, indicating that the fall-related environmental intervention in use was not reflected in the resident’s care plan. For another resident on an antiplatelet (blood thinner) for stroke prophylaxis, the facility documented two separate falls. After the first fall, the care plan called for vital signs every shift and orthostatic blood pressures (lying, sitting, standing) within the first 24 hours. The neurological flowsheet for that event showed repeated blood pressure readings only in the lying position and did not show orthostatic measurements as care planned. When the resident was transferred to an acute care facility and returned later the same day, the orthostatic blood pressure intervention was not continued or revised within the 24-hour period, and the DON later verified that the care plan should have been continued or updated. After a subsequent fall, the neurological flowsheet contained multiple blank entries for vital signs, pupil response, motor response, consciousness, speech, and patient response at several time points, indicating incomplete 72-hour neurological assessments. In addition, a physician order and care conference recommendation for bilateral floor mats were not fully implemented, as repeated observations showed only one floor mat in place, and an LVN and the DON confirmed that bilateral mats were ordered but not provided. For a third resident who experienced a fall with a bump and laceration to the left forehead, the change in condition evaluation documented provider recommendations to keep ice on the forehead, monitor blood pressures for 72 hours, and notify the physician. A subsequent physician order directed monitoring for orthostatic hypotension with blood pressures taken lying, sitting, and standing every shift for three days. The MAR showed a check mark indicating the task was completed, but no orthostatic blood pressure results were documented. The care plan for this resident’s fall included neuro checks per facility protocol and monitoring orthostatic blood pressure as ordered. However, the neurological flowsheet contained multiple blank entries for vital signs, pupil response, motor response, consciousness, speech, and patient response at several scheduled times. During interview, an RN stated the check mark on the MAR indicated completion of the task but acknowledged that the orthostatic blood pressure data could not be seen and verified that neurological assessments were incomplete and orthostatic blood pressures were not obtained per order. The DON later confirmed these findings.
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