Failure to Provide Individualized Fall Prevention and Adequate Supervision for High-Risk Residents
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure that cognitively impaired residents with a history of repeated falls were free from accident hazards and received adequate, individualized supervision to prevent falls with injury. Two residents with advanced dementia and documented fall histories were repeatedly placed in front of the nurses’ station for “supervision” without any assessment or care plan interventions that clearly defined their supervision needs. For one resident with severe cognitive impairment, impulsivity, and total dependence for transfers, fall care plans were generic, focused on environmental safety and post-fall monitoring, and did not address his inability to use the call light, his frequent attempts to stand unassisted, or the need for continuous, close supervision when agitated. Staff interviews confirmed that this resident could not follow directions, was highly impulsive, frequently tried to get out of bed or his wheelchair, and required someone to sit right next to him when he was awake and agitated. On the night of this resident’s serious fall, video footage showed he was brought out of his room around midnight and placed in his wheelchair in front of the nurses’ station, where he remained for several hours. Between approximately 5:01 A.M. and 5:29 A.M., he repeatedly leaned forward and attempted to stand from his wheelchair multiple times. A nurse was seen intermittently assisting him back into the chair but then leaving his side to perform other tasks, despite his immediate, repeated attempts to get up again. At the time of the final fall, the nurse had her back turned inside the nurses’ station, and the resident stood and fell forward out of camera view, resulting in two forehead lacerations and a C1 cervical fracture. Staff, including the unit manager and the nurse caring for him, acknowledged that he needed 1:1 supervision when repeatedly trying to stand, that there was not enough staff to provide this level of supervision, and that residents placed at the nurses’ station were not continuously supervised during busy times such as early morning hours. The facility also failed to adequately assess and care plan supervision needs for a second cognitively impaired resident with Alzheimer’s disease, difficulty walking, and multiple prior falls, including unwitnessed falls in her room and in common areas. Her fall risk evaluation was not updated in a timely manner, and her fall care plan remained vague, with non-specific interventions such as “initiate fall precautions” and “determine resident’s ability to transfer,” without clearly defined supervision frequency or responsibilities. She was placed in front of the nurses’ station when up in her wheelchair, yet she sustained an unwitnessed fall from her wheelchair in that location while nearby nurses were occupied giving report, resulting in a lumbar compression fracture. She later experienced additional unwitnessed falls in front of the nurses’ station and in the dining room while unsupervised. CNAs and a unit manager reported that this resident was confused, very independent, had poor safety awareness, often got up without asking for help, and required monitoring at least every 15 minutes, but they also stated there was not enough staff to provide that level of supervision. In both residents’ cases, interdisciplinary team (IDT) fall notes and evaluations did not identify the root causes of the falls or generate relevant, individualized preventive interventions. For the first resident, an IDT note documenting a post-fall review was acknowledged by the authoring unit manager to be falsified, not actually reflecting a real meeting or investigation, and the recommended interventions (such as 30-minute rounding) were not pertinent to the circumstances of the fall and did not meet his supervision needs. For both residents, IDT documentation after serious falls lacked analysis of why the falls occurred and did not include specific, actionable strategies to prevent recurrence. Fall risk evaluations were inaccurate or outdated, and suggested interventions (such as sensor alarms or toileting programs) were either not used by the facility or not appropriate for the residents’ conditions. Staff interviews consistently described a pattern of insufficient staffing to supervise high-risk residents, especially during peak workload times, resulting in residents with known high fall risk being left without adequate, individualized supervision despite being placed near the nurses’ station. The combination of non-individualized fall care plans, inaccurate or untimely fall risk assessments, lack of thorough root-cause investigations, and acknowledged inability to staff to residents’ supervision needs led directly to repeated, unwitnessed falls with serious injuries for these two cognitively impaired residents. The facility’s practice of placing high-risk residents in front of the nurses’ station without assigning dedicated staff or defining specific supervision parameters did not prevent falls and, in these cases, allowed residents with known impulsivity and poor safety awareness to stand and fall without timely staff intervention.
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