Failure to Provide Required Two-Person Assist During Shower Resulting in Resident Fall and Head Injury
Penalty
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure a resident was free from avoidable accidents by not providing the level of assistance with bathing that had been identified in assessments, and by not maintaining adequate supervision during a shower. The resident had significant medical conditions including persistent vegetative state, chronic respiratory failure with hypoxia, traumatic subarachnoid hemorrhage, Crohn’s disease, encephalopathy, schizoaffective disorder, and a history of subdural hemorrhage. Multiple assessments and summaries documented that the resident was totally dependent for bathing and, over time, required increasing levels of physical assistance. Early documentation showed a need for total assistance with bathing with one-person physical assist, but subsequent MDS assessments indicated the resident required two-person physical assist for bathing and had a history of falls, including falls with injury. The resident’s care plan documented total assistance needs for all ADLs, including bathing, and identified the resident as at risk for falls related to weakness, with interventions such as frequent checks while in bed and supervision when out of bed. Later, the care plan also identified a behavioral symptom of placing self on the floor, with interventions to assess whether the behavior endangered the resident, maintain a calm environment, redirect as necessary, and notify the provider if behaviors interfered with care. Despite MDS assessments dated in June and September indicating that the resident was totally dependent and required two-person assist for bathing, the care plan was not updated to reflect a two-person assist requirement for bathing prior to December. Monthly summaries in August, October, and November continued to document total dependence for bathing, with the level of assist noted as one-person in August and two or more persons in October and November, but this did not translate into a clearly updated care plan directive for two-person assist with bathing before the incident. On the date of the incident, a CNA took the resident to the shower room on a gurney and provided bathing assistance alone, believing the resident to be a one-person assist based on the absence of a green sticker indicating two-person assist. During or immediately after the shower, the resident became restless, jerked, and crossed his legs over the gurney rail, resulting in a fall from the gurney. The resident sustained an abrasion to the left side of the head, a hematoma on the right side of the head, and bleeding in the mouth of undetermined origin, and was transferred to the hospital where surgery for a brain bleed was later documented. Interviews with the DON and Administrator confirmed that MDS assessments had identified the resident as requiring two-person support for bathing at the time of the incident, that the care plan did not reflect this requirement prior to December, and that only one CNA was assisting the resident in the shower when the fall occurred. Staff interviews, including CNAs and an LPN, characterized providing one-person assist to a resident assessed as needing two-person assist, resulting in a fall, as neglect and acknowledged that failure to update and follow the care plan could lead to resident injury.
