Failure to Code Bilateral Wedge Cushions as a Restraint
Summary
The facility failed to accurately assess Resident 3 by not coding bilateral bolster wedge cushions as a restraint on the Minimum Data Set dated 2/26/2026. Resident 3 was admitted with diagnoses including dementia, bipolar disorder, and depression, and the H&P dated 1/13/2026 stated the resident did not have the capacity to understand and make decisions. The MDS also showed severely impaired cognition and dependence on staff for eating, oral and toileting hygiene, showers, and upper and lower body dressing. Resident 3’s order summary dated 1/12/2026 directed staff to apply bilateral bolster wedge cushions in bed as an enabler to help the resident identify the edge of the bed due to poor safety awareness and unsafe self-positioning. An undated informed consent signed by the responsible party described the bilateral booster wedge cushion in bed as an enabler for the same purpose. During observation on 4/7/2026, Resident 3 was resting in bed with bilateral pillow wedges placed on each side. During interviews, the MDS consultant, MDS nurse, RN, LVNs, and DON stated the bilateral bolster wedge cushions were considered a restraint and should have been coded as such in the MDS because there was a physician’s order, care plan, and signed restraint consent. Staff also stated the cushions were used because Resident 3 would wiggle out of bed and try to get out of bed, and that the restraint information was not being communicated in the MDS. The facility policy stated the RAI process is used for accurate assessment of each resident’s functional capacity and health status, and the restraint policy defined a restraint as a device that restricts freedom of movement or normal access to one’s body when the resident cannot mentally or physically self-release.
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.



