Three residents who were dependent on staff for bed mobility and transfers did not receive adequate supervision and safe handling during care and transfers, resulting in serious injuries. A resident who was totally dependent for bed mobility slid from the bed to the floor while a CNA focused on gathering supplies during care, later being found to have an ankle fracture. Another resident with a prior brain bleed, craniotomy, and left-sided paralysis, requiring a mechanical lift with two staff, sustained a head injury when a Hoyer lift was improperly positioned or controlled during transfer from a shower bed to a wheelchair, causing the lift bar to strike the top of the head and leading to ongoing head and neck pain. A third resident needing extensive assistance fell between a shower bed and her regular bed when a CNA attempted to transfer her without locking the shower bed wheels, resulting in acute L2–L3 compression fractures confirmed by CT.
A resident who required set-up assistance for eating spilled coffee onto bare upper thighs while being prepared for morning care, initially resulting in nonblanchable redness with intact skin and no reported pain. During later incontinence care, staff identified a broken blister on the resident’s right upper thigh, cleansed the area, and applied skin prep, but did not notify the MD until more than a day after the blister was first noted. An NP confirmed that although she had been informed of the coffee spill itself, there was no documentation that the subsequent change in skin condition had been communicated to a provider, resulting in a failure to promptly notify the on-call provider of the new skin alteration.
A resident with significant neurologic impairment and multiple contractures slid from bed and was assisted to the floor during the night shift, but an RN did not complete the initial post-fall assessment until the following day shift. An LPN documented that the resident was seated after the event, denied pain, had ROM and VS assessed, and was assisted back to bed with a CNA. The DON later reported that the CNA and LPN did not report the event as a fall because the resident was assisted down, and the LPN stated she relied on the CNA’s account when completing the incident report and was unsure if the RN had been notified.
A resident reported an allegation of physical abuse by a CNA during the night shift, which was documented in the clinical record. Facility policy required that all alleged violations be reported to the Administrator, state agency, APS, and other required agencies immediately but no later than two hours after the allegation. Instead, the allegation was reported to the state agency approximately nine hours after it was made. An RN acknowledged not reporting the allegation right away and waiting for the day shift, and the DON confirmed that the reporting timeframe was not followed.
A resident with dementia and a care plan for false accusations alleged physical abuse by a CNA. Facility policy required staffing or room changes to protect residents from an alleged perpetrator, but the CNA remained on duty providing care to other residents for the rest of the shift. An LPN and an RN confirmed that the CNA continued working with residents, with the CNA only being stopped from caring for the accusing resident’s room, resulting in a failure to fully implement the abuse protection policy.
A resident with CHF and kidney disease requiring dialysis was admitted and assessed as having congestive heart failure, but the baseline care plan lacked CHF-related interventions and there was no timely physician order for fluid restriction despite a nutrition assessment referencing a 1500 mL limit. A physician note identified the resident as high risk for rehospitalization and called for strict I&O and daily weights, yet a formal fluid restriction order was not entered until several days later, only after the responsible party requested it. The next day, the resident was sent to the hospital from dialysis for chest pain and shortness of breath. In interviews, the MD, RN, and DON all confirmed the resident should have been placed on fluid restriction and monitoring upon admission and that this was not done in a timely manner.
Surveyors found that dietary staff repeatedly failed to wear required hair and beard restraints while preparing food, washing dishes, and serving meals, and the Dietary Manager acknowledged that restraints should be worn at all times but that the facility had run out of them. These unsanitary practices occurred during routine kitchen operations and affected nearly all residents who received meals from the kitchen, with only two residents receiving nutrition via feeding tubes.
Surveyors found that medication carts were left unlocked and unattended in two separate locations. One cart on a hall outside a resident room was left unlocked while an LPN was inside the room with the privacy curtain pulled and unable to see the cart, with only a CNA present further down the hall. Another cart at the nurses’ station, shared by nurses on two halls, remained unlocked while the ADON walked past it twice and then left the area, leaving no one at the station until returning several minutes later to lock it. Facility policy required all medication and treatment carts to be locked when not in use and not left unattended while unlocked.
The facility did not provide required written information on advance directives and the right to accept or refuse medical and surgical treatment to two residents, one cognitively intact and one with moderately impaired cognition, as confirmed by EMR review showing no such documentation. The SSD reported having no written materials explaining types of advance directives or any signature page confirming verbal explanations or resident understanding. The AD stated the admission packet only asked whether a resident had or wanted an advance directive and did not include written definitions or explanations. The Administrator acknowledged being unaware of regulatory requirements and of the facility policy, which states that residents have the right to formulate an advance directive and to accept or refuse treatment, and that written information must be provided in an easily understood manner.
A cognitively intact resident with mild cognitive impairment reported to her son that a male CNA entered her room at night to provide incontinent care, which she refused, and that he returned and made an inappropriate sexualized remark when she again refused care. The son called the facility to report the concern, and the Admissions Director stated she immediately informed the DON, in line with protocol to notify leadership of abuse-related grievances. However, the DON reported she did not recall receiving the grievance and only became aware of the allegation when law enforcement arrived several days later after receiving a family complaint. The DON confirmed that the SSA was not notified of the abuse allegation until four days after the initial grievance, despite facility policy and leadership acknowledging that alleged abuse must be reported to the SSA within two hours.
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