Failure to Complete RCAs and Adjust Supervision After Repeated Falls
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to comprehensively assess and provide adequate supervision and fall prevention for a resident with significant cognitive and mobility impairments, and failure to complete consistent root cause analyses (RCAs) after multiple falls. The resident had diagnoses including major neurocognitive disorder due to vascular disease with behavioral disturbance, severe cognitive impairment, abnormalities of gait and mobility, repeated falls, CVA with left hemiparesis, acute encephalopathy, and chronic pain. A psychiatric mental health evaluation dated 2/25/26 specifically recommended 24-hour supervision, noted that simple ADLs needed to be initiated by caregivers, and that continual supervision might be needed to correct the resident’s behaviors. Despite this, the resident’s care plan did not incorporate the recommendation for 24-hour supervision or enhanced supervision, and there was no documented reassessment of supervision needs in response to the psychiatric evaluation. The resident’s care plans addressed assistance with ADLs, including substantial/maximal assistance for toileting and transfers, use of two staff with stand assist or full mechanical lift as needed, turning and repositioning every 2–3 hours, and directions to analyze time of day, places, circumstances, triggers, and de-escalating factors for behaviors. The care plan also directed staff to assess and anticipate toileting needs, comfort, positioning, and pain. However, from February through March 2026, the medical record showed no adequate documented analysis of root causes for the resident’s repeated falls, no evidence that the interdisciplinary team revised the care plan in response to these falls, and no documentation that supervision needs were reassessed in light of the psychiatric evaluation. The facility’s own Fall Prevention and Management Policy required a falls analysis when a resident has two or more falls, to review trends, identify individual and systemic causes, and evaluate and adjust interventions, but this was not consistently carried out for this resident. Between 2/18/26 and 3/29/26, the resident experienced at least seven unwitnessed falls in various locations, including the lounge, hallway, and bedroom. Some progress notes contained limited or incomplete RCAs, while several falls had no documented RCA at all. For example, after a fall on 2/18/26 when the wheelchair became stuck near a brick wall and the resident slipped onto the pedals, the note did not identify a root cause, and interventions were limited to toileting every two hours, repositioning, lowering the bed, and ensuring the call light was within reach. A 2/25/26 fall in the hallway identified that the resident slipped due to an unused right foot pedal being down, and the intervention was to remove and store that pedal, but there was no broader analysis of other contributing factors. Subsequent falls on 3/4/26, 3/16/26 (two separate unwitnessed falls), 3/17/26, 3/18/26, and 3/29/26 lacked comprehensive RCAs in the documentation. Interviews with staff and a family member further demonstrated gaps in assessment, supervision, and communication. The family member reported not always being informed of falls, stated that the resident was supposed to be toileted every two hours but this was not consistently done, especially with agency staff, and described finding the resident incontinent, sitting alone in the pod with a wet, foul-smelling wheelchair. Nursing assistants reported that the resident frequently tried to get up without help, that staff were not always present to watch her, that she needed to be checked every two hours, and that environmental factors such as noise, loud music, or light might contribute to her falls. They also stated they were unaware of any new interventions or team discussions following the multiple falls. The LPN case manager, an RN, and the DON all acknowledged the resident was a frequent faller, were unaware of the psychiatric evaluation recommending 24-hour supervision, and confirmed that supervision levels and the care plan had not been updated despite the ongoing fall pattern and the facility policy requiring comprehensive assessment and falls analysis after multiple falls. Overall, the facility did not consistently assess or address the factors contributing to the resident’s repeated falls, did not complete or document comprehensive RCAs after multiple unwitnessed falls, did not revise the care plan to reflect the psychiatric recommendation for continuous supervision, and did not ensure staff were informed of and implementing appropriate interventions as required by the facility’s fall prevention policy.
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