Failure to Implement Fall-Prevention Measures and Secure Oxygen Cylinders
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to maintain an accident‑hazard‑free environment and to provide adequate supervision and individualized fall‑prevention interventions for residents at risk for falls, as well as failure to properly secure oxygen cylinders. One cognitively intact resident with spastic quadriplegia, diabetes, hypertension, and an indwelling urinary catheter was identified as dependent for rolling in bed and at risk for falls, skin complications, and delayed wound healing. During provision of ADL care, a CNA raised the head of the resident’s bed to about 75 degrees and began a bed bath and linen change after discovering the mattress and sheet were wet from a leaking indwelling catheter. The CNA turned the resident onto his left side toward the window and tucked clean linen under him while the low air loss mattress remained wet with urine; the resident then slipped and fell between the bed and the window onto the floor. The CNA later acknowledged that the wet low air loss mattress was slippery and that she should have dried the mattress before turning the resident and tucking linen, and both another CNA and the DON stated it was not expected for a resident to fall during ADL care and that residents should not be rolled on a wet mattress. Another resident with multiple comorbidities including cerebral infarction, hemiplegia, pneumonia, oxygen dependence, kidney disorder, type 2 diabetes, hyperlipidemia, and morbid obesity, and who was on hospice and Enhanced Barrier Precautions, was also affected by deficient fall‑prevention practices. This resident was alert and oriented to person with a low BIMS score, required a Hoyer lift with two‑person assistance, and was unable to raise or lower the bed independently. Observations on multiple occasions showed the resident in bed without the thick floor mat that was care‑planned as a fall‑prevention intervention, despite documentation that the resident had experienced two falls, one in which he was found on the floor after trying to reach the bed remote and reported hitting his head and having bilateral lower extremity pain, and another in which he was again found on the floor on the right side of the bed. Although two thick mattresses were initially observed by the resident’s door and one was reportedly intended for this resident, they were removed, and only a thin floor mat was later observed in the room, contrary to the care plan specifying a mattress. In addition to fall‑related issues, the facility failed to ensure that oxygen cylinders were stored securely in accordance with its own policies and referenced standards. On the C Wing Unit 2 storage room, surveyors twice observed two partially filled oxygen tanks lying unsecured on the floor while seven other tanks were properly secured in racks. A housekeeping aide and an LPN each acknowledged that the unsecured tanks should be in the rack, with the housekeeping aide stating the need to avoid things exploding and the LPN stating the tanks should be in racks so they do not tip over and explode. The DON later confirmed that oxygen tanks should be on a rack so they are secured and protected from combustion, consistent with facility policy requiring oxygen cylinders to be stored in designated areas and protected from mechanical shock and falling objects.
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