Failure to Notify Physician and Family and Appropriately Respond After Unwitnessed Fall With Head Injury
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to immediately notify the physician and family, and to appropriately respond, after a resident experienced an unwitnessed fall with a head injury shortly after admission. The resident was an older female admitted on 1/16/26 with multiple serious diagnoses, including grade 4 glioblastoma multiforme with chemo and brain resection, cerebral edema, left hemiparesis after cerebral infarct, CAD with two stents, diabetes mellitus, hypertension, seizure disorder, arthritis, and a history of multiple falls at home. On admission, her blood pressure was documented at 164/100 by LVN A, but no interventions were put in place. Several of her ordered medications, including dexamethasone and cyclosporine eye drops, were documented as "Medication Unavailable" the evening of admission. LVN A stated she called the MD or NP to verify medications but did not leave a voicemail and there was no documentation of this contact in the nursing notes, while the NP later reported she had not been notified about the resident or any medication review. In the early morning hours of 1/17/26, RN A documented that around 1:20 a.m. the resident was found on the floor, brought back to bed, and had vital signs assessed, with no swelling or bruising initially noted; 30 minutes later, a small swelling was observed on the left side of her forehead. A later nursing note at 4:18 a.m. documented a change of condition, stating the resident had fallen and had a bruise on her left forehead and was transferred to the hospital. However, the resident’s family member reported that no one from the facility called her about the fall or the head injury; she learned of the incident directly from the resident and arrived at the facility around 1:40 a.m. to find the resident with a significantly swollen knot on the left side of her head. The family member also stated the resident’s call light had been behind the bed and out of reach, and that the resident’s phone was not within reach when the fall occurred. The family member reported that when she arrived, RN A was not on the unit and had to be located outside in his car by CNA A. She stated that RN A appeared surprised by the extent of the resident’s head swelling and told her he was overwhelmed by the number of residents he was responsible for, and that the resident was not the only one who had fallen. The family member demanded that the resident be sent to the hospital, but reported that RN A initially refused to call 911, stating he needed permission from the DON and instead sought authorization to use a regular ambulance service. EMS records show multiple elevated blood pressure readings during transport. The NP later confirmed she had not received any call, message, or text from LVN A regarding medication review or from RN A regarding the fall with head injury, and only learned of the situation days later from a voicemail from the DON. The administrator stated that the expectation is that after a fall, especially an unwitnessed fall, the nurse should assess the resident, perform neuro checks and vital signs before moving the resident, and immediately notify the family and physician, and that if a family requests hospital transfer, the resident should be sent out. The resident was hospitalized with an admitting diagnosis of fall, initial encounter, from [DATE] to 01/25/26. The facility’s own Promoting/Maintaining Resident Dignity policy states that all staff must protect and promote resident rights, treat residents with respect and dignity, report and document information regarding resident preferences, and speak respectfully to residents. The family member’s email to the facility and corporate office described the environment as dangerous, alleged that an inexperienced nurse admitted to sleep deprivation and inability to manage his caseload, and complained that support staff prioritized their phones over patient safety. She specifically questioned why she was not called immediately after the fall, why a resident with a seizure history was left without a call button, and why a nurse who reported being sleep-deprived was caring for her mother. The NP’s and MD’s interviews, combined with the lack of documentation of physician notification and the family member’s account of not being notified, support the finding that the facility failed to immediately inform the physician and the family of the resident’s fall with head injury and did not follow its own expectations for post-fall assessment and communication.
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