Unsafe Shower Chair Transfers and Ineffective Brakes Leading to Resident Fall and Head Injury
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure safe transfers and prevent accidents during use of shower chairs and wheelchairs, resulting in a serious fall with head injury for one resident and unsafe transfer practices for others. One resident with diagnoses including atrial fibrillation, dementia, chronic kidney disease, obesity, sequelae of cerebral infarction, diabetes mellitus type 2, hypertension, and osteoarthritis was care planned as at risk for falls and required partial/moderate assistance for transfers. During a transfer from a shower chair to a wheelchair after a shower provided by a CNA, the resident reported asking if both the shower chair and wheelchair were locked and being told they were. The resident stated she placed her hands on the arms of the shower chair, began to stand, and the shower chair moved backward; she was unable to sit back down and fell to the floor, striking her head. She reported that the CNA was in front of her near the wheelchair rather than behind the shower chair securing it, and that in the past staff had held the back of the shower chair during transfers. Hospital documentation following this event described a mechanical fall while the resident was getting out of the shower chair when it slipped, causing her to strike her head, with imaging showing a possible 2–3 mm subarachnoid hemorrhage and a minimal parieto‑occipital hematoma. Facility staff interviews provided differing accounts of the transfer mechanics but consistently indicated that the resident was transferring from the shower chair to the wheelchair when the incident occurred. The CNA involved stated he locked both the shower chair and wheelchair, that the resident declined assistance and transferred independently, and that she became weak, sat on the edge of the shower chair seat, and the back of the chair raised and tipped forward. The facility’s incident note documented that the CNA reported holding the wheelchair while the resident transferred and that one of the shower chair wheels came out, causing her to lose balance and fall. Nursing leadership interviews reflected conflicting recollections of whether the resident was holding the shower chair armrests or the wheelchair armrests at the time of the fall, but confirmed that the shower chair moved and that a wheel was reported to have come off. Further observations and staff interviews revealed that the plastic‑caster shower chairs used in the facility did not remain stationary even when their brakes were applied, and that staff were aware they could slide or roll on tile floors. Direct testing of the shower chairs showed that with the brakes locked, the chairs could still be propelled or rolled on the tile floor. A maintenance director initially stated he had no concerns about the brakes and that CNAs knew they had to hold the shower chairs because they slide on tile regardless of brake use, later acknowledging that the wheels did turn despite the brake mechanism being applied. An LPN and CNA demonstrated that locked shower chair wheels could roll when pushed, and another CNA stated she did not rely on the brakes, instead using her own strength to hold the chair and at times moving a shower chair and positioning a wheelchair for a resident without locking the wheelchair brakes before seating the resident. In another observed transfer, a cognitively intact resident who required only setup or cleanup assistance was able to pull a locked‑brake shower chair toward himself and cause it to slide backward as he sat, and was then transported down the hall with the shower chair brakes still locked while the wheels continued to roll. These observations occurred in the context of a facility transfer policy that required stabilizing or locking all surfaces, including wheelchairs and beds, and prohibiting residents from pulling up on assistive devices to achieve standing, indicating that the transfer practices and equipment performance did not align with the written policy. The residents involved in these events had significant medical and functional conditions relevant to safe transfers. The resident who fell and sustained a head injury had intact cognition per MDS but multiple comorbidities including prior cerebral infarction, morbid obesity, and dependence on renal dialysis, and was care planned as at risk for falls. Another resident had dementia, unsteadiness on feet, abnormal gait and mobility, lack of coordination, and weakness, and required supervision/touching assistance for all transfers; during an observed shower transfer, his shower chair rolled slightly back when he stood because the CNA was holding his incontinence brief and not securing the chair, and the CNA acknowledged that most shower chair brakes were not solid and that she did not put faith in them. A third resident with Parkinson’s disease with dyskinesia, bipolar disorder, anxiety, congestive heart failure, cardiomegaly, osteoarthritis, and prior cerebrovascular events was cognitively intact and required only setup or cleanup assistance for transfers, yet was able to move a locked‑brake shower chair toward himself and cause it to slide during transfer. Across these cases, the combination of shower chairs whose wheels rolled despite engaged brakes, staff reliance on physical strength rather than reliable braking mechanisms, and failure to consistently secure both the shower chairs and wheelchairs during transfers contributed to unsafe transfer conditions and the cited deficiency. The facility’s own transfer policy specified that all surfaces, including wheelchairs and beds, must be stabilized or locked, and that residents should push up from wheelchair armrests and not pull up from assistive devices to achieve standing. However, the observed practices showed residents pulling on shower chair armrests and moving chairs with brakes applied, staff not always locking wheelchair brakes before seating residents, and staff acknowledging that they did not rely on shower chair brakes because they allowed movement on tile floors. The facility was unable to provide a manufacturer’s instruction manual for the shower chairs in use, and staff interviews indicated awareness that the chairs could slide even when brakes were engaged. These documented actions, inactions, and equipment conditions formed the basis of the deficiency for failing to ensure the environment was free from accident hazards and that adequate supervision and safe transfer practices were provided to prevent accidents.
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