Failure to Evaluate and Adjust Fall Interventions for High-Risk Residents
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to evaluate and adjust fall interventions for two residents with multiple falls, despite both being consistently assessed as high fall risk. One resident had cerebellar ataxia, autistic disorder, weakness, restlessness, agitation, and severely impaired cognition, and was dependent on staff for all ADLs. Multiple fall risk assessments over several months documented this resident as high risk for falls, and the care plan contained numerous fall-related interventions such as ensuring the call light was within reach, frequent checks when unattended, use of a mattress on the floor, wedges for positioning, Dycem and a touchpad call light, frequent comfort and positioning checks in the wheelchair, and ensuring bed brakes were locked. However, the resident continued to experience falls, including from a chair by the nurse’s station and from the bed area, and the facility did not demonstrate that it systematically evaluated the effectiveness of these interventions in preventing further falls. For this same resident, fall investigations documented specific events but did not consistently lead to thorough evaluation or new targeted interventions. One fall occurred when the resident was seated by the nurse’s station and fell over the right side of the chair; another occurred when the resident was found on the floor next to the wall and bed, with staff later educated about locking the bed. A subsequent unwitnessed fall in the hallway in front of the nurse’s desk resulted in a contusion and transfer to the emergency room. Additionally, nurse’s notes described an incident where the resident became so agitated and thrashing during a mechanical lift transfer that he got himself out of the sling, and staff discovered the bed wheels were flipped almost 180 degrees; the EMR lacked an investigation of this incident, even though administrative nursing staff later verified it should have been considered a fall. Staff interviews revealed that three CNAs sometimes assisted with lift transfers because the resident had previously fallen out of the sling and that the resident was kept near the nurse’s station due to anxiousness and agitation, but there was no documented evaluation of whether existing interventions were effective or needed modification in light of these repeated events. The second resident had diagnoses of weakness, unsteadiness on feet, hypertension, and impaired cognition, and required at least supervision or partial assistance for transfers, toileting, dressing, mobility, and ambulation. Fall risk assessments repeatedly identified this resident as high risk for falls, and the care plan included interventions such as ensuring the call light was within reach, encouraging use of the call light, placing non-skid strips in various locations, adding anti-rollbacks to the wheelchair, using Dycem in the wheelchair, assessing the toilet seat, and placing a sign in the bathroom to use the call light. Despite these measures, the resident experienced multiple falls: being found on the floor fully clothed with shoes and coat on and unable to explain what she was doing; being found on the floor with the wheelchair behind her and brakes unlocked; and sliding out of the wheelchair after leaning too far forward near the heater. The documented responses included a care plan meeting with family and an order to complete a 3-night sleep diary, but the EMR lacked documentation that the sleep diary was completed, and the care plan did not reflect the intervention of placing a bedside table in front of her when she sat by the heater. Further observation and interviews showed that staff actions did not consistently align with the resident’s assessed needs and care plan for supervision with transfers and toileting. During a direct observation, a CNA instructed the resident to wipe herself, then told her she could transfer herself from the toilet to the wheelchair and from the wheelchair to the bed, despite the resident asking for assistance multiple times and demonstrating unsteadiness, nearly missing the wheelchair seat, and having difficulty maneuvering out of the bathroom. The CNA later stated that the resident was supervised with toileting and transfers and suggested the resident only asked for help because the CNA was being observed. A nurse stated the resident was a stand-by assist and that staff should help if she needed assistance, and administrative nursing staff stated they expected staff to assist the resident when requested and acknowledged that the sleep study had not been completed and that a family conference was not an appropriate care plan intervention. Overall, the facility did not show that it evaluated the effectiveness of fall interventions or consistently implemented and documented appropriate, resident-centered fall prevention measures for these two high-risk residents, despite recurrent falls. The facility’s Falls and Fall Risk, Managing policy stated that staff, with physician input, would implement a resident-centered fall prevention plan to reduce specific risk factors, prioritize interventions when multiple options existed, and implement additional or different interventions or justify the current approach if falls recurred. In both residents’ cases, falls recurred despite existing interventions, yet the record lacked evidence of systematic evaluation of why falls continued, whether interventions were effective, or whether new or modified interventions were needed. The absence of investigation for at least one fall event, the lack of follow-through on ordered monitoring (such as the 3-night sleep diary), and the failure to incorporate observed interventions into the care plan contributed to the deficiency in ensuring the environment was free from accident hazards and that adequate supervision and assistance were provided to prevent accidents.
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