Failure to Use Required Two-Person Assist and Bed Safety Measures During Care on LAL Mattress
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to implement required safety measures and adequate supervision during bed-level care for a dependent resident, resulting in a fall from an elevated bed onto a concrete floor. The resident had chronic respiratory failure and anoxic brain damage, with MDS assessments showing severely impaired cognitive skills for daily decision-making, inability to speak or be understood, and significant bilateral upper and lower extremity ROM impairments. The resident was coded as totally dependent for all ADLs, including bed mobility, hygiene, bathing, dressing, and transfers, requiring the assistance of two or more helpers for these activities. The resident’s care plans documented total dependence for ADLs and bed mobility, and the resident was on a LAL mattress for pressure redistribution, which staff and the DON acknowledged as a fall risk surface. On the day of the incident, CNA 1 provided clothing, bedding, and personal hygiene care to the resident alone, despite facility expectations and documented requirements that at least two staff assist with major care and repositioning for residents on LAL mattresses. CNA 1 raised the bed approximately three or more feet to a working height and proceeded to roll the resident from her right side to her back while standing on the opposite side of the bed, with the resident facing away from her. CNA 1 reported that the resident, known to sometimes move or wiggle during care, began wiggling her legs, which then slipped off the LAL mattress. CNA 1 attempted to hold the resident’s upper body but was unable to maintain her grip, and the resident slipped out of her hands and fell from the elevated bed onto the concrete floor between the bed and the window. CNA 1 confirmed that only the small side rails near the resident’s head were up, there were no floor mats in place, and the bed was not in the low position. Nursing staff and the DON confirmed that the resident was total care, not alert or aware, unable to control body movement, known to wiggle hands and feet unpredictably, and considered a fall risk, particularly in the context of being on a LAL mattress. LN 1 and LN 2 both stated that the sub-acute unit staff were supposed to work in pairs for clothing changes, hygiene care, and bedding changes due to residents’ multiple tubes and high dependency, and LN 2 specifically noted that LAL mattresses can be slippery and residents can slide off easily, which is why the facility always required at least two staff for care. The DON’s review of the EHR and the Lift Transfer Reposition document confirmed that the resident required two staff for repositioning in bed, and CNA 1’s skills evaluation showed she had been checked off on the protocol requiring a two-person assist for residents using a LAL mattress. The DON determined that the cause of the fall was CNA 1 providing care alone, not using the required two staff, raising the bed, and rolling the resident away from herself onto the unprotected side of the bed, which left no barrier to prevent the resident from falling. As a result of this fall from the elevated bed onto the concrete floor, the resident sustained a chin laceration requiring nine sutures, an acute C1 cervical spine fracture, and multiple bruises and skin injuries, including periorbital bruising and denuded skin over the right clavicle, as documented in the hospital emergency department notes and the facility’s post-hospital skin assessments. The emergency department record described the event as an accident following a fall at the facility, with MRI confirming the acute C1 fracture and neurosurgery recommending an Aspen cervical collar for several months. The facility’s Fall Management policy stated that those determined to be at risk would receive appropriate interventions to reduce risk and minimize injury, but the documented practices during this incident did not align with the resident’s identified need for two-person assistance and the known risks associated with a LAL mattress and the resident’s condition.
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