Failure to Maintain Safe Resident Equipment and Implement Post‑Fall Interventions
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to maintain resident equipment in safe, operable condition and to implement and communicate effective post‑incident interventions, resulting in injuries to two residents. One resident with hemiplegia and generalized muscle weakness was dependent on staff for bed mobility and transfers and lacked full sensation in the left arm due to a prior stroke. This resident developed a large, dark bruise and multiple skin tears on the left forearm. Nursing documentation and staff interviews indicated that the resident’s flaccid arm likely fell into an exposed metal hinge area on a geriatric recliner‑type wheeled chair when the back of the chair was pushed upright, causing a hematoma and skin tears. The vinyl seat material had pulled away, leaving the metal hinge fully exposed, and staff placed a piece of foam over the metal after the injury. The resident reported being unaware of the injury until a CNA noticed it before a shower, and described stinging pain when water hit the arm. Following identification of the injury, the care plan was updated to include an intervention for the resident’s left arm to be propped on a pillow while in the chair to prevent the arm from hanging. However, during observation, the resident was seated in the same type of geriatric wheeled chair without a pillow supporting the flaccid left arm, which rested at an angle on the armrest and abdomen. CNAs interviewed stated they were unaware of the pillow intervention and had not been informed of this change in care, despite having worked multiple shifts since the injury. One CNA stated that although they technically had access to care plans, they did not have time to review every resident’s care plan and relied on being told about new interventions. Another CNA confirmed that the resident did not have a pillow under the arm when transferred from chair to bed and that this was the first time they had heard of the pillow requirement. A second resident with dizziness, essential hypertension, dorsalgia, need for assistance, altered mental status, and moderate cognitive impairment experienced an unwitnessed fall in the room, resulting in a right forearm skin tear. The fall assessment documented that the resident was found on the floor next to the bedside, wearing nonskid footwear, with a dry, debris‑free floor, and identified lightheadedness, dizziness, and a narrow pathway to the nightstand as root causes. The care plan noted the resident was at risk for falls and skin impairment, with an intervention to rearrange the room. The resident later reported that the skin tear occurred when the arm struck the sharp edges of the bed’s footboard during the fall and repeatedly told staff that the foot of the bed caused the injury. Observation revealed a damaged, jagged, sharp‑edged laminate area approximately seven inches long on the left edge of the footboard, and the bed was positioned close to an air conditioner/heater, leaving a narrow walking path where the resident stated she fell. Nursing and administrative staff acknowledged that the damaged footboard and narrow path were likely involved in the injury and that maintenance had been aware the bed was in disrepair, but the footboard had not been evaluated during the fall investigation and the room had not been rearranged as planned.
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