Failure to Ensure Safe Assisted Ambulation Resulting in Resident Fall
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to maintain safety during assisted ambulation, resulting in a fall for one cognitively impaired resident with a history of repeated falls and gait abnormalities. The resident had diagnoses including Alzheimer’s disease, dementia, generalized anxiety disorder, repeated falls, and abnormalities of gait and mobility. Earlier therapy records from August 2025 documented that the resident could ambulate 150 feet with a front‑wheeled walker and supervision/touching assistance. However, subsequent assessments and nurse aide charting showed the resident required partial to substantial/maximal assistance for walking 10 feet, extensive assistance for walking in the room, and substantial/maximal assistance for sit‑to‑stand, with walking 10 feet sometimes not attempted due to medical or safety concerns. Despite these findings, fall risk evaluations in January and April 2026 indicated the resident was not considered at high risk for falls, and the care plan interventions included assistance with transfers and toileting, possible use of a sit‑to‑stand lift during fatigue, and use of a wheelchair for locomotion. On the date of the incident, the resident fell in her room while attempting to go to the bathroom with a walker. According to the fall incident and investigation reports, the resident stated she was trying to go to the bathroom with a walker, lost her balance, and fell, striking the back of her head. A CNA reported she had been assisting the resident to the bathroom with a walker, standing behind the resident with a hand near the lower back. The CNA observed that a mechanical lift in the room was obstructing the path and, while keeping a hand near the resident, pushed the lift out of the way; during this maneuver, the resident lost balance and fell backwards to the floor. The fall was witnessed, and the resident was found lying on her left side in front of the bed, alert and oriented, with no apparent injuries and no reported pain, though she reported hitting her head and was sent to the hospital for evaluation. Interviews and record review revealed additional factors contributing to the deficiency. The CNA stated she did not use a gait belt during the ambulation or transfer and that this was how she normally walked with the resident, also stating she had never used the sit‑to‑stand lift with this resident. The Director of Rehabilitation indicated that therapy staff use gait belts when ambulating residents and would recommend nurse aides do the same, and acknowledged that the resident had not been seen by therapy since August 2025, despite current nurse aide documentation showing higher assistance needs than at therapy discharge. The DON stated that nurse aide staff did not use gait belts for this resident and that a hand to the back was considered appropriate, and also reported there was no facility policy addressing ambulation or transfers of residents. The facility’s Fall Prevention Policy stated staff would keep walkways clear and use proper transfer techniques and gait belts as needed, but there was no specific ambulation/transfer policy, and the DON asserted that existing documentation and assessments indicating higher assistance needs were incorrect.
Penalty
Resources
Below are regulatory guidelines relevant to this citation:
Trusted data from CMS and state health departments
Every citation, penalty and Plan of Correction is sourced from public CMS records (latest release June 24, 2026) and official state health department websites — never guesswork.
Trusted by long-term care providers and associations.



