Failure to Implement Adequate Fall-Prevention Interventions for High-Risk Resident on Air Mattress
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure that an identified high‑risk resident had appropriate fall‑prevention interventions in place, resulting in a fall from bed with major injury. The resident had a history of cerebral infarction with right‑sided hemiplegia and aphasia, was severely cognitively impaired, and was dependent on staff for ADLs, including rolling in bed and transfers, per the admission MDS dated 5/10/25. The resident was always incontinent of bowel and bladder and had decreased mobility requiring assistance for repositioning, as documented in the CAA for pressure injuries. A fall risk evaluation dated 5/8/25 scored the resident at 7, which the facility defined as high risk for falls. Despite these identified risk factors, the fall care plan initiated 5/7/25 for risk of falls related to right hemiparesis, impaired mobility, and general weakness contained only the intervention to "anticipate and meet the resident’s needs" and did not include specific fall‑prevention measures. The resident’s ADL care plan for bed mobility, initiated 5/8/25, documented that the resident was an assist of one with turning and repositioning in bed and that the resident used enabler bars and an unspecified assistive device to maximize independence with turning and repositioning. However, the admission MDS indicated the resident was dependent on staff for rolling in bed, and other mobility tasks were not attempted due to medical condition or safety concerns, creating contradictory assessments regarding the resident’s bed mobility and the appropriateness of enabler‑type interventions. The surveyor noted that the interventions listed on the ADL care plan, including enabler bars and an assistive device, were not actually present on the bed according to the post‑fall investigation. Additionally, the resident was on an air mattress, which was identified in the fall investigation as a predisposing situational factor, but this air mattress was not added to the resident’s care plan until after the fall. On the date of the incident, staff documentation indicated that a nurse was called to the room by a CNA and found the resident lying on the floor next to the bed. The resident was unable to describe the fall, and the event was documented as unwitnessed, with no environmental hazards identified and no injuries initially observed. The hospital record later documented that the resident had been rolled onto her side for hygiene purposes and fell out of bed, and that the resident was on aspirin and Eliquis at the time. The facility’s fall detail and investigation forms listed multiple predisposing physiological factors, including confusion, difficulty with communication, gait imbalance, incontinence, weakness, antianxiety use, and the presence of a specialty bed, but the surveyor noted these risk factors had not been assessed or addressed in the care plan prior to the fall. The resident was subsequently found at the hospital to have a left subacute infarct of the left parietal and frontal lobe with petechial hemorrhage along the acute infarct (brain bleed). The surveyor concluded that the facility did not adequately assess the resident’s various risk factors or implement appropriate interventions to prevent a fall with major injury. The facility’s own fall prevention program, dated 1/3/23, required implementation of universal environmental interventions for low/moderate risk residents and additional individualized interventions for high‑risk residents, including assistive devices, increased rounding, low bed, alternate call systems, and scheduled toileting or ambulation. Despite this written program, the resident’s care plan prior to the fall did not reflect these high‑risk protocols, and there was no documentation of specific fall‑prevention strategies tailored to the resident’s identified high fall risk, right‑sided weakness, severe cognitive impairment, anticoagulant use, and use of an air mattress. The surveyor also noted inconsistencies between the facility’s internal investigation narrative, which stated that appropriate interventions were in place and that the incident was not due to noncompliance, and the clinical and care‑planning record, which showed missing and contradictory interventions and an incomplete assessment of fall risk factors before the fall occurred.
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