Resident Fall from Hoyer Lift Due to Inadequate Supervision and Incomplete Transfer Assessment
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure an environment free from accident hazards and to provide adequate supervision during a mechanical lift transfer for a resident who required staff assistance and a Hoyer lift for safe transfers. The resident had multiple diagnoses including polyosteoarthritis, generalized anxiety disorder, major depressive disorder, muscle weakness, unsteadiness on feet, and a need for assistance with personal care. A Quarterly MDS showed intact cognition with a BIMS score of 14, no limb impairment, wheelchair use, and dependence on staff for most ADLs, but did not indicate use of a mechanical lift. A subsequent Significant Change MDS documented a BIMS score of 12, continued wheelchair use, dependence for most ADLs, and one fall with injury since the last assessment, but again did not indicate use of a mechanical lift. The Functional Abilities CAA documented dependence on staff for transfers, and the Fall CAA documented a fall and use of antianxiety and antidepressant medications. A Nursing: Lift and Transfer Evaluation dated earlier in the month was not completed, and no lift and transfer evaluation was documented until several weeks after the incident. The resident’s care plan, revised previously, documented an ADL self-care performance deficit related to activity intolerance, dementia, and impaired balance. An intervention for use of a commode with Hoyer lift transfer by two staff was resolved on the same date as the incident, and a new intervention instructed staff that the resident was to use a bedpan and was a Hoyer lift, with two staff, for transfers. Another intervention initiated that same day and later revised documented that the resident was a Hoyer lift for all transfers and that staff were to use a medium sling. On the evening of the incident, nursing documentation recorded that a CNA called the nurse to the resident’s room and reported that the resident had slid out of the Hoyer lift sling during a transfer. When the nurse entered the room, the resident was lying on her back with her legs over the top of the lift’s legs, and the sling remained attached to the Hoyer lift. The nurse noted a large bump on the back of the resident’s head and the resident’s report of back pain. Witness statements from the CNAs involved described that two CNAs were transferring the resident from a bedside commode back to her chair using a Hoyer lift. They reported adjusting the Hoyer sheet under the resident to clean her, then hooking the resident to the lift and raising her. One CNA operated the lift while the other cleaned the resident and then turned away to dispose of dirty wipes and move the commode. During this time, the resident complained of back pain, moved, and then slipped through the buttocks opening of the lift sheet, hitting her head and then her back on the floor. Another CNA’s statement confirmed that after the fall, the resident complained of head pain. Subsequent nursing notes documented an abrasion to the back of the resident’s head, ongoing soreness, pain all over, back and shoulder pain, and a red/purple bruise on the back of the head. The facility’s Safe Lifting and Movement of Residents policy required ongoing assessment of residents’ transfer needs by nursing in conjunction with rehabilitation, documentation of transferring and lifting needs in the care plan, and training of direct care staff in the use of mechanical lifting devices, but the resident’s lift and transfer evaluation was not completed until weeks after the fall. Interviews with staff described the expected safe procedure for Hoyer transfers, including a minimum of two staff, verification of correct sling size, one staff operating the lift while the other maintained constant contact and stabilized the resident, opening the lift legs for stability, locking the wheels when raising or lowering the resident, and attaching the sling using the same loops on all sides. The CNAs and administrative nurse interviewed stated that two staff were required for Hoyer transfers and that one staff member should maintain constant contact with the resident in the sling to prevent unnecessary movement. The resident later reported feeling nervous and anxious about using the Hoyer lift after the fall and stated that no staff asked if she was afraid of using it before or after the incident. The administrative nurse acknowledged that there was no transfer assessment performed after the fall until the Significant Change MDS was completed and that the resident was not reassessed for increased anxiety following the incident.
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