Failure to Prevent Hazards and Complete Post‑Fall Monitoring for Multiple Residents
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to maintain an accident‑hazard‑free environment and to provide adequate supervision and monitoring after accidents for multiple residents. Facility policy required identification and evaluation of environmental hazards, implementation and monitoring of interventions, completion of incident reports, notification of the administrator if a medical device caused or contributed to an injury, and monitoring of residents for a minimum of 72 hours after an incident. A neurological assessment flowsheet specified that after a fall where the head was struck or the fall was unwitnessed, neuro checks and vital signs were to be completed every hour four times, then every four hours six times. Surveyors found that these requirements were not consistently followed for four sampled residents. One cognitively intact resident with paraplegia used a motorized wheelchair independently and had a mobility care plan that did not address any risk assessment, identified hazards, safety interventions, or monitoring related to motorized wheelchair use. The facility’s incident log showed that this resident was struck by a vehicle while out in the community, causing them to fall from the wheelchair and sustain abrasions, and resulting in damage to the wheelchair, including a bent wheel and other needed repairs. Although staff interviews indicated that residents using motorized wheelchairs were supposed to be evaluated by therapy for safety prior to use and that such use should be care planned, there was no motorized wheelchair driving assessment or updated mobility care plan with interventions or preventive measures in place for this resident until more than two months after the accident. Staff, including the physical therapist, resident care manager, and DON, acknowledged that the resident should have been reassessed for motorized wheelchair safety after the accident. Another resident with bilateral below‑knee amputations, poor balance, and deconditioning had a fall care plan that directed staff to monitor for 72 hours post‑fall and complete neurological assessments per protocol. This resident fell from a shower bench when it tipped forward because it was missing rubber caps on the bottom of the legs, resulting in a skin tear to the stump. The facility’s post‑fall investigation documented that the shower chair was missing the rubber caps, and required neurological checks were not completed at several scheduled times following the fall. Subsequent observations showed other shower benches in different halls were also missing one or more rubber stoppers. Staff interviews confirmed that rubber stoppers were important to prevent slipping and falls, that equipment needing repair was to be reported through the maintenance system, and that neuro assessments were required for certain falls, but the maintenance director did not check all benches after being notified of missing parts on one bench. A third resident, severely cognitively impaired, dependent on staff, and at risk for falls, had sustained no falls in the six months prior to admission but experienced seven falls within approximately two months after admission. The care plan instructed staff to remind the resident to use the call light, ensure proper footwear, and involve the resident in activities to minimize falls. Review of fall investigations showed that for multiple falls, there was no documentation that vital signs and neuro checks were completed according to the required flowsheet timeline, and no documentation that the resident was monitored after those incidents. Staff interviews confirmed that a paper fall packet with required actions, including complete body assessment, vital signs, and neuro checks at specified intervals, was to be fully completed, and that residents should be placed on alert charting and monitored for 72 hours after a fall, but the DON acknowledged this resident was not consistently monitored as required. A fourth resident with moderately impaired cognition, hallucinations, disorganized thinking, dementia, prior stroke with weakness, and dependence on staff for mobility and transfers had 12 falls over a six‑month period. Review of fall investigations and the medical record showed that for several of these falls, there was no documentation that vital signs and neuro checks were completed per the neuro flowsheet timeline, and no documentation that the resident was monitored for 72 hours after certain incidents. Staff interviews indicated that after a fall, a nurse was to assess the resident, and vital and neuro checks were to be done according to the schedule on the neuro flowsheet, with the resident placed on alert charting and monitored every shift for at least 72 hours. The DON acknowledged that this resident had not been completely monitored for injury following some falls. These findings collectively demonstrate failures to follow facility policy and required monitoring protocols related to accidents and falls.
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