Failure to Notify Physician and Hospice and Complete Post-Fall Assessment After Unwitnessed Fall in Anticoagulated Hospice Resident
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to notify a resident’s physician, hospice provider, and resident representative after an unwitnessed fall, and failure to complete required post-fall assessments and documentation. A cognitively impaired, bed- and wheelchair-dependent female resident with multiple diagnoses, including hypertension, type 2 diabetes, vascular dementia, and a history of falls, was admitted on hospice and was prescribed an anticoagulant (blood thinner). Her care plan and MDS documented that she was at risk for falls related to impaired mobility, used a wheelchair, required total assistance with ADLs, had severe cognitive impairment (BIMS score of 00), and was on oxygen therapy for shortness of breath. The facility’s fall policy defined a fall as any event in which an individual unintentionally comes to rest on the floor or ground, including when a resident is found on the floor without a witness, and required evaluation for injuries, vital signs, neuro checks for unwitnessed falls, and notification of the physician, family, DON, nursing supervisor, and other appropriate team members. On the day of the incident, the DON was working as a floor nurse from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. and found the resident on a fall mat on the floor in her room sometime between 4 p.m. and 5 p.m. The DON acknowledged that the resident was a known fall risk with a history of falls. A CNA reported that the DON requested assistance to move the resident from the floor back to bed, that the resident denied falling, and that there were no visible injuries at that time. The DON stated she assessed the resident for pain because she was found on the floor and because it was shift protocol, but she did not document this pain assessment. She further admitted that she did not complete a head-to-toe assessment, post-fall assessment, progress note, SBAR, incident report, neurological checks, or obtain vital signs after the unwitnessed fall, despite the resident being on an anticoagulant and facility protocol requiring these actions for unwitnessed falls. The DON also stated that she did not notify the primary physician, hospice nurse, resident representative, Administrator, or other medical personnel because she did not consider the resident being on the floor mat as a fall, even though the facility’s fall policy defined a fall to include residents found on the floor. She reported she was not aware the resident was on a blood thinner, although she described the facility protocol for unwitnessed falls in residents on anticoagulants as including calling the doctor and hospice and monitoring for bleeding with neuro checks. Other staff, including an LVN, the NP, the MD, the hospice RN, the CCM/MDS coordinator, and the Administrator, all confirmed they were not notified of the unwitnessed fall and stated they would have expected notification per policy and would have performed or directed further assessment had they been informed. Facility records contained no documentation of the unwitnessed fall, no progress notes related to the event between the relevant dates, and no evidence that the physician or hospice were notified at the time of the fall, despite the hospice agreement requiring the facility to immediately inform hospice of any change in condition suggesting a need to alter the plan of care. The resident later experienced a rapid neurological and respiratory decline and ultimately expired at the facility, and an Immediate Jeopardy was identified related to the failure to notify and assess after the unwitnessed fall. Additional interviews reinforced that the facility’s own policies and staff expectations were not followed in this case. An LVN reported that the resident had been receiving PRN Tramadol for pain and that the family had instructed staff to interpret facial grimacing as a sign of pain; she also noted the resident’s decline in activity and intake around the time of the incident. The hospice wound care nurse had given orders to start comfort care due to fluid-filled lungs and elevated temperature, and Tylenol suppositories were administered when the resident could no longer swallow. The RN who assessed the resident the morning after the unwitnessed fall stated that the resident was no longer at baseline and had a rapid decline in neurological and respiratory status, and that she was not informed of the fall; she indicated she would have come in to assess for injuries and notified the hospice physician if she had known. The speech therapist acknowledged recommending 1:1 supervision for the resident due to fall risk but admitted she did not notify nursing of this recommendation, later stating she assumed everyone knew the resident was a fall risk. Collectively, these actions and omissions—failure to recognize and treat the resident’s position on the floor as a fall under facility policy, failure to perform required assessments and monitoring, and failure to notify the physician, hospice, and responsible parties—constituted the cited deficiency.
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