Failure to Investigate and Prevent Recurrent Falls in a High-Risk Resident
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to thoroughly assess and address the causes of repeated falls for a resident at high risk for falls, and to ensure that fall-prevention interventions were consistently implemented. The resident was admitted with Alzheimer’s disease, dementia, anxiety disorder, atrial fibrillation, and other comorbidities, and was care planned early on for safety concerns and fall risk, including use of non-skid footwear and encouragement to stay in common areas while awake. A falls risk assessment identified the resident as at higher risk for falls. Despite this, the facility did not complete or provide comprehensive fall investigations, did not document orthostatic blood pressure assessments when claiming orthostatic hypotension as a cause, and did not demonstrate that existing interventions such as non-skid footwear were in place at the time of multiple falls. On one occasion, the resident was found on the floor in her room after reporting she heard voices in the hall and went to check; the facility later stated the fall was related to orthostatic hypotension, but there was no evidence in the medical record that orthostatic blood pressures were obtained at the time of the fall. The resident was sent to the ER and diagnosed with a closed compression fracture of the L3 vertebra. Subsequent falls occurred when the resident was restless and trying to stand up alone, including while on C. diff isolation, and when she was observed on camera walking around her room, sitting on the arm of a recliner, and falling to the floor. In these instances, the record did not show that the facility verified whether non-skid footwear was in use, and interviews confirmed that at least one fall occurred when the resident had nothing on her feet. The facility’s comprehensive fall investigations and witness statements were withheld as QAPI, and no documentation was provided to show thorough investigation, confirmation that interventions were in place, or determination of root causes. Additional falls included an unwitnessed fall where the resident was found on the floor next to her rollator with a head laceration requiring staples, and another fall near the nursing station where she was found sitting on the floor in front of her wheelchair and later diagnosed with an intertrochanteric right femoral fracture. The facility reported that the resident was last seen 10–20 minutes before some of these falls, but did not provide evidence that ordered safety checks (such as every 15-minute checks during isolation) were actually completed. The final fall occurred in the secured unit dining area, where the resident was assisted to a padded wheelchair in a semi-reclined position and left in the dining room while the LPN passed medications and CNAs provided morning care to other residents. Within approximately 5–15 minutes, the resident was found on the floor with facial injury, multiple fractures, and extensive ecchymosis. Staff interviews indicated the resident had been restless and scooting in her chair the prior day, but this was not communicated in report, and the facility could not identify the cause of the fall. The death certificate later listed the manner of death as accident, with the underlying cause being sequelae of blunt impacts to the head, trunk, and left arm with fractures and soft tissue injuries due to falls.
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