Unwitnessed Fall and Delayed Diagnostic Response for High-Risk Resident
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide a safe environment and adequate supervision to prevent accidents for a cognitively impaired resident with a history of falls and significant medical conditions. The resident was an elderly female with traumatic cerebral hemorrhage, prior left femur fracture, dementia, epilepsy, anxiety disorder, and hypothyroidism. Her MDS showed severe cognitive impairment (BIMS 00) and functional dependence, requiring at least supervision or touching assistance for bed mobility and partial/moderate assistance for transfers and sit-to-stand. Her care plan, updated after a prior fall beside the bed, identified her as a fall risk and included interventions such as frequent checks at least every two hours, increased supervision by placing her in staff-visible areas, use of a low bed with a fall mat, and evaluation of the environment after falls. Despite these identified risks and interventions, the resident was reported by her roommate to have been seen on the floor on the morning of 04/06/26, with the roommate unsure how she ended up there. The resident reportedly got herself up from the floor and back into her wheelchair without staff assistance. Staff interviews indicated that the resident was known to get on and off the bed without assistance and was sometimes found on the fall mat or in her chair, despite encouragement to ask for help. On the morning of 04/06/26, a CNA discovered that the resident’s right leg was visibly more swollen than the left and that she screamed when her leg was touched during incontinence care. The CNA notified the LVN, who assessed the resident and noted a swollen, bruised, and twisted right knee and leg. The environment around the resident’s bed was observed by the Administrator, DON, and LVN, who all reported seeing a low bed with a fall mat beside it and a wheelchair near the head of the bed, and they stated they did not observe tripping hazards. However, the resident’s care plan called for increased supervision and frequent checks, and staff acknowledged that the resident was a fall risk who sometimes got up without assistance. The facility’s own investigation documented that the resident had been seen on the floor and had then gotten herself back into her wheelchair, yet no staff member could explain when or how the injury occurred. Subsequent x-rays revealed an acute distal femoral fracture and a fractured right knee, consistent with a serious injury following an unwitnessed fall, demonstrating that the resident did not receive adequate supervision to prevent accidents as required by her assessed needs and care plan. In addition to the supervision concerns, there was a significant delay between the initial recognition of the injury and completion of diagnostic imaging and transfer to the hospital. Hospice was notified around midday on 04/06/26 and ordered a STAT x-ray, but the x-ray was not completed until the following morning, approximately 24 hours after the initial request. The first x-ray showed a fractured tibia, and a repeat x-ray later that day showed a fractured right knee. The resident was not sent to the emergency room until that evening, approximately 33 hours after the original x-ray request. During this period, the resident received multiple doses of morphine for pain and shortness of breath. The report identifies that the facility failed to ensure the resident received adequate supervision when she experienced a fall that resulted in fractures to her right thigh and right knee, placing residents at risk for injuries and a decline in health. The facility’s fall management policy identified risk factors such as cognitive impairment and neurological disorders and required staff to monitor and document residents’ responses to fall-prevention interventions and to re-evaluate interventions if falls continued. In this case, the resident had a documented history of falls, severe cognitive impairment, and neurological conditions, and her care plan specified increased supervision and environmental evaluation. Nonetheless, the fall that led to her fractures was unwitnessed, the exact circumstances were unknown to staff, and the resident was able to get herself up from the floor without staff involvement. These facts, combined with the delayed diagnostic response after the injury was identified, form the basis of the cited deficiency for failure to maintain a safe environment and provide adequate supervision to prevent accidents.
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