Failure to Investigate Falls, Update Care Plans, and Ensure Nurse Assessment Before Residents Were Moved
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to consistently investigate resident falls, determine root causes, and evaluate or revise fall-prevention interventions, as well as failure to follow its own event/accident policy requiring immediate nursing assessment before moving a resident after a fall. The facility’s Event Investigation policy required any staff member who discovered or witnessed an event to immediately report it to the nurse in charge, with the charge nurse responsible for completing a Report of Event form, documenting factual details, location, type of event, injuries, vital signs, neuro status, pain, first aid, and actions taken to prevent recurrence. The facility’s Fall Champion Program guidelines further required that every fall be reviewed in morning meetings, with IDT notes, updated fall risk assessments, and care plan revisions, and that after 72 hours the DON, ADON, and MDS Coordinator review the event and documentation. Post-fall guidelines required staff to stay close to the resident, provide emergency care, take vital signs, notify the physician, fall champion, administrator, and family, and for the charge nurse to initiate and document preventative fall interventions in the care plan. For one resident with repeated falls, dementia, stroke, difficulty walking, and muscle weakness, the facility documented multiple falls but did not consistently complete event reports, analyze contributing factors, or update the care plan after each fall. The resident’s care plan initially included a history of falls and interventions such as keeping the bed in the lowest position with brakes on, and after a fall on 2/23/26, fall mats and a bolster mattress were ordered and a directive to analyze falls for patterns and trends was added. However, after subsequent unwitnessed and witnessed falls on 03/06/26, 03/07/26, 03/11/26, 03/16/26, 03/18/26, 03/20/26, and 03/25/26, documentation repeatedly lacked completed event reports, contributing factor analysis, or evidence that the care plan was reviewed or revised. Some event reports listed no contributing factors or immediate measures, and several falls were only documented in progress notes without corresponding event reports or care plan updates, despite the resident experiencing pain, skin tears, and multiple unwitnessed falls. Interviews with nursing staff and the MDS Coordinator confirmed that the only consistent interventions were a fall mat, low bed, and bolsters, that the MDS Coordinator had been off work and was unaware of the multiple March falls, and that care plans with new fall interventions had not been reviewed or revised for some time. For another resident with moderate cognitive impairment, dependence in ADLs, Alzheimer’s disease, non-Alzheimer’s dementia, spinal stenosis, and identified as at risk for falls on the MDS, the facility failed to complete a fall risk assessment, event reports, or a fall-related care plan with interventions after two documented falls. A nurse’s note described an unwitnessed fall from bed at 5:30 A.M. with mild left shoulder pain and administration of pain medication, but there was no event report or documented fall-prevention interventions. The nurse later stated that upon returning from break, he was informed by staff that the resident had fallen and that CNAs had already put the resident back in bed. The CNA reported that, unable to find the RN and with the resident asking to get off the floor, he assessed the resident by moving arms and legs, noted no complaints of pain, and, together with another CNA, assisted the resident off the floor before a nurse assessment, contrary to facility policy. A second fall was documented in a nurse’s note as an unwitnessed fall near a window with no injury identified, but again there was no event report, no documented interventions to prevent further falls, and no fall care plan, even though the comprehensive MDS identified the resident as at risk for falls. Interviews with the Administrator, DON, and MDS Coordinator confirmed that CNAs should not get residents up before a nurse assessment, that any nurse could update care plans after falls, that staff were expected to follow the event/accident policy and update care plans with each fall, and that routine IDT meetings to review falls were not being conducted.
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