Failure to Provide Adequate Supervision and Safe Positioning During Perineal Care Resulting in Hip Fracture
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure adequate supervision and safe positioning during incontinence care, resulting in a resident falling from bed and sustaining a right hip fracture. The resident had significant medical conditions including cerebrovascular disease, left-sided hemiplegia/hemiparesis following a stroke, vascular dementia with severe cognitive impairment (BIMS 7/15), muscle weakness, and a left-hand contracture. Her care plan documented an ADL self-care performance deficit related to hemiplegia, impaired balance, stroke, and confusion, and specified that she required one staff assist for bed mobility and two staff with a mechanical lift for transfers. The care plan also allowed a right upper side rail as an enabler, which the resident used with her right arm to assist with bed mobility. On the date of the incident, a CNA was providing perineal care after the resident had a very large bowel movement. The CNA positioned the resident on her left side, which was the paralyzed side, and facing the window, with the CNA standing behind her. At that time, the bed had only a right-side enabler bar; there was no left-side enabler bar for the resident to grasp with her functioning right hand when turned toward the left. The resident was not positioned toward the CNA for added stability and did not have anything to hold onto with her right hand while lying on her left side. The CNA reported that she had one hand on the resident and used the other to pull wipes from the package, then turned to reach for more wipes. During this brief period, the resident slid or rolled off the left side of the bed onto the floor. The CNA did not witness the actual fall, as she was turned away at the moment it occurred. The administrator later identified that the resident had been on a low air loss mattress and that the resident was rolled to her weakened side without something to hold onto, while the CNA reached behind her instead of maintaining secure contact. Following the fall, the RN responding to the incident found the resident on the floor on her back with a pillow under her head, documented vital signs, and initially recorded a pain score of 0 with the resident at baseline. A fall report described the event as a witnessed fall without head injury while the resident was receiving care for a large bowel movement. The RN documented a change in condition related to the fall but did not specifically document range of motion, although she later stated she had assessed ROM and found it at baseline. The next day, another CNA reported hearing a loud cracking sound from the resident’s right leg while repositioning her on her left side, after which the resident complained of significant right hip pain. An LPN notified the provider, and an x-ray was obtained that initially showed no acute fracture. Subsequently, the resident was sent to the emergency department, where a CT scan revealed a mildly displaced, slightly comminuted fracture of the greater trochanter of the right femur. Interviews with long-term caregiving staff confirmed that it was not considered safe to walk away or turn away from this resident during perineal care, that she was typically rolled onto her left side facing the window, and that she relied on having something to grab with her right arm when turned to that side. The administrator identified the root cause as the resident being rolled to her weakened side without a grab bar on that side and the CNA turning away and removing her hand from the resident, leading to the fall from the bed.
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