Failure to Maintain Effective Fall Prevention and Functioning Alarms for Multiple Residents
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure that the environment was free from accident hazards and that residents received adequate supervision and effective fall-prevention interventions, including properly functioning chair/bed alarms. For one resident with intact cognition who used a wheelchair and walker and was independent with mobility, multiple falls were documented over a short period. Nursing notes described repeated episodes of this resident sliding or rolling from the bed to the floor, often while sitting or lying on the edge of the bed, reaching for items, or attempting to get up. These falls resulted in bruises, lacerations, and reopened scabs. Incident reports for these falls lacked documentation of new or revised interventions, and the resident’s care plan did not reflect the repeated falls or any updated fall-prevention strategies beyond prior education not to sit on the side of the bed. Another resident with moderately impaired cognition, a history of stroke, non‑Alzheimer’s dementia, TBI, and multiple prior falls was care planned for fall risk with general interventions such as anticipating needs, ensuring call light access, and appropriate footwear, later adding that the resident could be taken near the nurse station for more supervision. Despite this, numerous falls were documented in various locations, including the hallway, resident room, in front of the closet, in the country kitchen, and near recliners and wheelchairs. Several falls involved self‑transfers, attempts to walk without assistive devices, or attempts to move between chairs and wheelchairs, sometimes associated with seizures or raising the bed to an unsafe height and turning up the TV volume so that alarms could not be heard. Nursing notes repeatedly described the resident being found on the floor, sometimes with lacerations, hematomas, or scattered bruising from numerous falls. The care plan did not show new or revised interventions corresponding to these repeated falls, even though a physician order required documentation of behaviors related to self‑transfers and alarm use. A third resident with severely impaired cognition, gait/balance problems, and multiple psychotropic and insulin medications was care planned for fall risk with an intervention to ensure alarms were in place and functioning properly, supported by a physician order to check alarms four times daily. This resident experienced falls where she was found sitting on the floor next to the bed or after ambulating independently and hitting her head on the bedstand, resulting in a laceration. An incident report documented that the resident’s chair alarm was not going off at the time of one fall, and another nursing note stated that the bed alarm was plugged in and working but did not sound when the resident was found on the floor with emesis present. Staff interviews revealed that one type of alarm box had a delayed response or sometimes did not go off, and that the DON was aware of issues with certain alarm units. Interviews with the MDS coordinator, DON, ADON, LPNs, and CNAs showed that post‑fall interventions were often limited to re‑education, that care plans were not consistently or promptly updated after falls, that root cause analyses were not formally documented, and that staff were uncertain about where fall interventions were documented and who was responsible for updating care plans. These actions and inactions contributed to the failure to ensure effective supervision, functioning alarms, and timely, resident‑specific interventions to prevent recurrent falls for the residents reviewed.
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