Failure to Prevent Elopement and Recurrent Falls Due to Inadequate Supervision and Care Planning
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure the environment was free from accident hazards and that residents received adequate supervision to prevent accidents, specifically related to elopement risk and fall prevention. One resident identified as a new admission was evaluated on 02/28/26 as being at risk for elopement and wandering, with documentation that the resident wandered around the facility and into rooms. Despite this evaluation, the baseline care plan dated the same day did not include any interventions for wandering or elopement risk. An admission assessment dated 03/06/26 documented moderately impaired cognition with a BIMS score of 09 and diagnoses including schizophrenia and seizure disorder. On 03/07/26, the resident was reported missing from their room around 11:20 a.m., and an incident report and progress note showed the resident was found a couple of blocks from the facility, having tripped and fallen outside and sustaining abrasions to the hand and knee that required first aid. Following the elopement, documentation showed the resident was placed on one-on-one staff supervision and the care plan was updated; however, subsequent observations revealed lapses in supervision. On 03/11/26, the resident was observed in bed with a staff member seated outside the door, and the resident stated they were not allowed to leave the facility alone. On 03/12/26, the resident was observed in bed with no staff supervision, then walking out of the room toward the dining room without staff present, until an unidentified staff member later noticed the resident in the hall and alerted the charge nurse. Interviews indicated that prior to the elopement the resident had not been on frequent checks because staff did not consider them an elopement risk, despite the earlier evaluation. The ADON later stated the baseline care plan lacked elopement/wandering interventions because they had failed to communicate with the weekend RN who completed the elopement evaluation and were unaware the resident was at risk. Environmental observations on 03/13/26 showed the dining room exit door and the outside perimeter gate in the smoking area were unlocked and accessible to residents, and the DON and administrator acknowledged the dining room exit door was not secured and that the resident likely exited through the unlocked door and perimeter gate. The deficiency also includes the facility’s failure to provide adequate supervision, reassess fall risk, investigate root causes, and implement fall-prevention interventions for a resident with a history of multiple falls. Facility records identified this resident as having several falls without injury on 06/04/25, 06/05/25, 06/18/25, 06/30/25, and 07/31/25, with no fall-prevention interventions documented for any of these events. A fall on 09/25/25 resulted in severe right leg pain and an emergency room visit, with a subsequent nurse’s note documenting a right hip fracture requiring surgical repair. Review of the care plan dated 07/31/25 showed no fall-prevention interventions in place for the 09/25/25 fall, and a later care plan dated 10/06/25 documented the resident’s diagnoses, including vascular dementia and muscle weakness, and the prior falls, but still showed no interventions for those falls. A nurse’s note dated 10/20/25 documented another fall on 10/19/25 that resulted in a second right hip fracture, again with no documentation of interventions in place to prevent that fall. Observations and interviews further demonstrated the lack of systematic fall-prevention planning for this resident. On 03/12/26, the resident was observed sitting in a geriatric chair near the nurse’s station with a fall mat at bedside and was later assisted to stand and ambulate with a walker. The resident reported falling frequently and not knowing why, and stated that staff followed them everywhere to prevent falls but were unsure what specific interventions were in place. An LPN stated the resident had frequent falls and that interventions included a fall mat at bedside and keeping the resident under close observation, but could not clarify what “close observation” entailed and acknowledged that interventions were communicated verbally rather than being reflected in the care plan. Another LPN stated they relied on the care plan to know fall-prevention interventions and, if not listed, had to depend on other staff for guidance. The MDS coordinator stated all falls, regardless of injury, should result in care plan interventions to prevent recurrence and did not know why this resident’s falls lacked interventions, and the DON confirmed there were no interventions on the care plan for the resident’s falls despite the expectation that such interventions should have been in place. Facility policies reviewed by surveyors underscored the deficiencies. An undated wandering policy stated that the facility would ensure the safety of residents who wander and that the MDS nurse would complete a wandering assessment on admission and work with the care plan team to develop, maintain, and update a care plan for each resident who wanders. A Falls – Clinical Protocol dated 03/2018 stated that staff and the physician would identify pertinent interventions to prevent subsequent falls and address the risks of clinically significant consequences of falling. A Care Plan Completion policy stated the facility would develop a comprehensive person-centered care plan for each resident that includes measurable objectives, timeframes, and services to meet medical, nursing, mental, and psychosocial needs. Despite these policies, the facility did not ensure that the elopement risk assessment for the first resident was communicated and incorporated into the baseline care plan, did not secure exit doors and perimeter fencing to prevent elopement, and did not consistently implement or document individualized fall-prevention interventions for the second resident after multiple falls and two hip fractures.
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