Mountain Ridge Health And Rehab
Inspection history, citations, penalties and survey trends for this long-term care facility in Black Mountain, North Carolina.
- Location
- 611 Old Us Highway 70 East, Black Mountain, North Carolina 28711
- CMS Provider Number
- 345048
- Inspections on file
- 18
- Latest survey
- October 21, 2025
- Citations (last 12 mo.)
- 5 (2 serious)
Citation history
Health deficiencies cited at Mountain Ridge Health And Rehab during CMS and state inspections, most recent first.
A resident with significant neurological and musculoskeletal impairments, who was on antiplatelet therapy, fell headfirst from a mechanical lift during a transfer performed by two nurse aides. Despite the resident's immediate complaints of head and neck pain, staff moved her from the floor back to bed using the mechanical lift before EMS arrived. The resident was later diagnosed with a C1 cervical fracture and died from complications related to blunt force trauma to the neck. Staff and medical interviews confirmed the resident was moved prior to EMS assessment, contrary to best practices for suspected spinal injury.
A resident with significant mobility impairments and on antiplatelet therapy was unsafely transferred using a mechanical lift when two nurse aides failed to ensure her feet cleared the bed, resulting in her feet becoming caught, a loss of support, and a headfirst fall from the sling. The incident led to a cervical fracture and subsequent death due to complications of blunt force trauma to the neck. Staff did not maintain hands-on support or follow manufacturer and facility protocols during the transfer.
Surveyors found that the facility did not post cautionary signage outside the rooms of multiple residents receiving supplemental oxygen, despite physician orders and active oxygen therapy. Staff interviews revealed a lack of awareness or clarity about the need for room-specific oxygen signage, and the facility's policy limited signage to major entry points due to its smoke-free status.
Surveyors found that staff did not discard food with visible spoilage and failed to date open food items in the walk-in cooler. An opened container of sour cream and a flat of eggs, including two cracked eggs, were undated, contrary to facility policy. The Dietary Manager confirmed these items should have been dated and the spoiled eggs discarded.
A resident with anxiety and depression was prescribed PRN Lorazepam without a required 14-day stop date. The order remained active without administration, and staff interviews revealed that providers often omitted stop dates when entering orders. The DON confirmed the omission and noted that the admitting nurse could have clarified the order during verification.
Three residents' MDS assessments were inaccurately coded, with one resident's hospice care not reflected and two residents' Level II PASRR status omitted, despite documentation and staff confirmation that these services and conditions were present.
The facility failed to prevent catheter bags from touching the floor for two residents, increasing infection risk. Staff struggled to position the bags correctly, and the facility did not obtain physician orders to flush a resident's suprapubic catheter as recommended, leading to catheter leakage and an ER visit.
The facility failed to remove expired produce from the walk-in refrigerator and improperly stored boxes of food on the floor of the walk-in freezer. The Dietary Manager acknowledged the oversight, and the Administrator confirmed the deficiencies.
Failure to Maintain Resident Immobilization After Headfirst Fall During Mechanical Lift Transfer
Penalty
Summary
A resident with a history of cerebral infarction, normal pressure hydrocephalus, aphasia, hemiplegia, contractures, osteoarthritis, osteoporosis, and prior vertebral fractures was dependent on staff for transfers and was prescribed antiplatelet medications increasing her risk of bleeding. During a mechanical lift transfer performed by two nurse aides, the resident slipped out of the sling, fell headfirst to the floor, and struck her head. Immediately after the fall, the resident was found lying supine on the floor, alert but complaining of head and neck pain, as well as left shoulder pain. The nurse on scene assessed the resident, noting her complaints and visible injuries, including a bruise and a skin tear. Despite the resident's complaints of head and neck pain and the mechanism of injury, staff proceeded to move her from the floor back to her bed using the mechanical lift before Emergency Medical Services (EMS) arrived. The staff, including two nurses and two nurse aides, rolled the resident onto the lift pad and transferred her to bed, with one nurse attempting to stabilize her head during the process. The facility did not have a cervical collar available at the time. EMS was called after the transfer, and upon arrival, EMS was informed of the headfirst fall and the resident's complaints. EMS placed a cervical collar and transported the resident to the emergency room. At the hospital, the resident was diagnosed with a C1 cervical vertebra fracture with moderate displacement and associated ligament disruption. She was not a surgical candidate and was transitioned to hospice care, where she later died. The immediate cause of death was listed as complications of blunt force trauma to the neck. Interviews with staff and medical personnel confirmed that the resident was moved prior to EMS assessment, despite her complaints of head and neck pain following a witnessed headfirst fall from a mechanical lift.
Removal Plan
- Reviewed risk management (incident/accident) reports to identify any other incidents involving mechanical lift transfer or falls with major injury, focusing on head or neck injury and inappropriate movement.
- Reviewed all resident transfers to acute care hospital to identify transfers involving serious injury from a fall on the head.
- Reviewed all Facility Reported Incidents to the state agency to identify any incidents involving serious injury from a fall on the head or neck.
- Reviewed the grievance log to identify any complaints of serious injury from a fall on the head or neck.
- Collaborated with the Medical Director to develop education content for Licensed Nurses on appropriate post-fall response actions, including recognizing severity and potential injury.
- Developed education from facility policy and Medical Director direction, emphasizing not moving residents with signs/symptoms of unconsciousness, head/neck pain, tenderness, or deformities, and maintaining alignment while awaiting EMS.
- Educated all Licensed Nurses working on the training developed by the Medical Director for assessing residents, when not to move them, and potential additional injury from moving after a head or neck injury.
- Ensured all newly hired staff will receive this education during orientation.
- Called all nurses not previously educated prior to their next shift to provide education and confirm understanding.
- Maintained a list of staff to confirm education completion.
- Provided written information at each nurses' station.
- In-person education for all nurses on assessing residents, when not to move them, and potential additional injury, to be completed on or before their next shift.
- Educated all Nurse Aides working that when a resident is found down or has a fall/accident, they are not to move the resident and must notify the licensed nurse and wait for instructions.
- Called all Nurse Aides not previously educated to provide education and confirm understanding.
- Ensured all newly hired Nurse Aides will be educated during orientation.
- Licensed Nurses to review with each Nurse Aide at the beginning of each shift for two weeks that they cannot move a resident who has fallen or is found down until the Licensed Nurse assesses the resident.
- Educated Administrative staff, Activities staff, Therapy, Housekeeping, Laundry, Maintenance, and Dietary Departments that no resident can be moved if found on the ground or after a fall/accident, and to notify the licensed nurse immediately.
- Ensured all staff will be educated on or before their next shift; newly hired staff will be educated during orientation.
- Interim DON, Administrator, and Minimum Data Set Nurses to review, five days a week, incident/accident reports, 24-hour report, order listing report for medication changes, discharge report, and grievance log to ensure all falls and injuries from a fall on the head are handled according to the plan.
Unsafe Mechanical Lift Transfer Resulting in Fatal Resident Fall
Penalty
Summary
A deficiency occurred when staff failed to provide a safe transfer for a resident with significant physical impairments, including left foot drop, hemiplegia, and hemiparesis, who was also on antiplatelet medications. During a mechanical lift transfer, two nurse aides did not ensure that the resident's feet, which had shoes on, cleared the bed while being lifted. As the lift was moved, the resident's feet became caught on the mattress, and when they came loose, the resident swung and fell headfirst out of the sling from a height of approximately four feet, resulting in a C1 cervical vertebra fracture. The resident was subsequently transferred to the emergency department, placed in a cervical collar, and later transitioned to hospice care, where she died from complications of blunt force trauma to the neck. The incident was witnessed and documented by staff, with both nurse aides involved providing statements and interviews. One aide turned away from the resident to prepare the wheelchair, leaving the resident unsupervised and without physical support during the lift. The other aide continued to move the lift even after noticing the resident's foot was caught, failing to stop or seek assistance to guide the resident's legs. Neither aide maintained hands-on contact with the resident during the transfer, contrary to manufacturer instructions and facility policy, which require two staff to actively assist and ensure the resident is elevated high enough to clear the bed before moving the lift. Observations and interviews confirmed that the mechanical lift and sling were used, but the process deviated from both manufacturer guidelines and facility policy. The resident's care plan specified total assist by two staff for transfers using a mechanical lift, and the facility's policy required staff to follow manufacturer recommendations. Despite these requirements, the staff did not ensure the resident's safety during the transfer, directly leading to the fall and subsequent fatal injury.
Removal Plan
- Assess Resident #1's post-fall condition and transfer to the emergency department for evaluation and treatment.
- Update Resident #1's care plan to reflect the fall, interventions, and injuries.
- Notify the Interim Director of Nursing, Administrator, Corporate Director of Clinical Services, and Corporate Director of Operations of the incident.
- Initiate investigation, including suspension of both Nurse Aides involved in the transfer.
- Reenact the incident with both Nurse Aides to establish consistency in the description of events.
- Remove and review the lift and sling used during the incident by the Maintenance Director for function and quality.
- Examine all facility lifts and slings for function and quality per manufacturer guidelines.
- Review current residents and care plans to identify those requiring lift transfers and update as needed.
- Review risk management reports to confirm no other incidents involving mechanical lift transfers occurred.
- Review personnel files and facility grievance logs for both Nurse Aides to identify any prior disciplinary action or similar events.
- Educate all Nurse Aides on safe transfer processes based on manufacturer instructions and facility guidelines, including always having an actively assisting partner, appropriate sling selection, correct positioning, secure placement, confirmation of lift base legs spread, and confirmation of sling straps before moving the lift.
- Validate competency for Nurse Aides on lift transfers.
- Include lift transfer education and competency in new Nurse Aide orientation.
- Educate Licensed Nurses on proper transfer processes and observation requirements for Nurse Aide transfers.
- Provide training for Licensed Nurses.
- Include lift transfer education in new Licensed Nurse orientation.
- Provide lift competency training for all Licensed Nurses, including demonstration of safe transfer process using a manikin.
Failure to Post Oxygen Cautionary Signage for Residents Receiving Supplemental Oxygen
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to post cautionary and safety signage outside the rooms of residents receiving supplemental oxygen. This deficiency was identified for five residents who had physician orders for continuous or as-needed oxygen therapy due to conditions such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, acute respiratory failure with hypoxia, pneumonia, heart failure, and emphysema. Observations on multiple occasions confirmed that these residents were receiving oxygen via nasal cannula connected to either oxygen concentrators or portable tanks, yet no signage was present outside their rooms to indicate oxygen was in use. Interviews with nursing staff, including nurses and the Director of Nursing (DON), revealed that staff were either unaware of any requirement or policy to post oxygen signage on individual resident room doors. The DON confirmed that the facility's practice had been to only place oxygen signage at major entry points, based on the facility's smoke-free campus policy, and that this had been the standard for several years. Staff interviews further indicated a lack of knowledge or clarity regarding the need for room-specific oxygen signage, even when new oxygen orders were initiated for residents. The deficiency was consistently observed across all five residents reviewed for respiratory care, with each resident actively receiving oxygen therapy during the surveyors' visits. Despite the presence of oxygen equipment and active therapy, there was no cautionary or safety signage posted on or near the doors of these residents' rooms. The absence of such signage was confirmed through direct observation and staff interviews, and the facility's policy was cited as the reason for this omission.
Failure to Discard Spoiled Food and Date Open Items in Walk-In Cooler
Penalty
Summary
Surveyors observed that the facility failed to discard food items showing signs of spoilage and did not date open food items in the walk-in cooler. Specifically, an opened container of sour cream and an egg flat containing 17 eggs were found without open dates, and two of the eggs were cracked with visible shiny clear material around the cracks. The Dietary Manager confirmed that facility policy requires dating all opened food items and immediate disposal of spoiled food, and acknowledged that these items should have been dated and the cracked eggs discarded. Both the Dietary Manager and cook were identified as responsible for checking and labeling food items daily, but these procedures were not followed as required.
Failure to Include Required Stop Date for PRN Psychotropic Medication
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to ensure that an as-needed (PRN) psychotropic medication, Lorazepam, prescribed for a resident with anxiety and depression, included a required 14-day stop date. The medication order was entered by a nurse upon the resident's readmission, but no stop date was specified. Review of the resident's medication administration record showed that the order for Lorazepam remained active throughout the month, although no doses were administered. The resident was cognitively intact, displayed no behaviors or rejection of care, and did not receive any antianxiety medication during this period. Interviews with facility staff revealed that providers had recently begun entering their own orders and often omitted stop dates for medications when indicated. The DON acknowledged that the order should have included a 14-day stop date and that the admitting nurse had an opportunity to clarify this with the provider during order verification. The facility had a standing policy to discontinue unused medications after 60 days, but this did not align with the specific requirement for a 14-day stop date for PRN psychotropic medications.
Inaccurate Coding of MDS Assessments for Hospice and PASRR Status
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to accurately code Minimum Data Set (MDS) assessments for three residents in the areas of hospice care and PASRR (Preadmission Screening and Resident Review) status. For one resident with diabetes mellitus who was certified for hospice care, the quarterly MDS assessment did not indicate that the resident was receiving hospice services, despite documentation and staff confirmation that hospice care was being provided. The MDS Coordinator acknowledged the oversight and stated that hospice care should have been reflected in the assessment. For two other residents with diagnoses including schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder, delusional disorder, anxiety disorder, and major depressive disorder, both had valid Level II PASRR determinations indicating serious mental illness. However, their respective MDS assessments failed to indicate their Level II PASRR status. The MDS Coordinator confirmed these omissions and noted that the assessments were completed by a previous coordinator who was no longer employed. The Administrator confirmed that MDS assessments are expected to be coded correctly.
Failure to Prevent Catheter Bags from Touching the Floor and Obtain Physician Orders
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to prevent urinary catheter bags from touching the floor for two residents, increasing the risk of infection. Resident #69, who was moderately cognitively impaired and had an indwelling catheter, was observed multiple times with his catheter bag touching the floor. Staff, including the ADON and NAs, struggled to find a suitable position for the catheter bag on his wheelchair, leading to repeated instances where the bag was in contact with the floor. The DON acknowledged that catheter bags should not touch the floor but did not provide a solution to the issue at the time of the observations. Resident #51, who had a suprapubic catheter and was severely cognitively impaired, was also observed with his catheter bag touching the floor on multiple occasions. Staff, including Nurse #1 and NA #1, had difficulty positioning the catheter bag due to the long tubing and the design of the wheelchair. Despite attempts to reposition the bag, it continued to touch the floor. The DON and ADON recognized the problem but did not implement an effective solution. Additionally, the facility failed to obtain physician orders to flush Resident #51's suprapubic catheter as recommended by the Urology PA. The Urology PA had advised flushing the catheter to prevent blockages, but this recommendation was not communicated effectively to the facility staff. The NP and DON were aware of the recommendation but did not ensure that an order was placed. This oversight led to Resident #51 experiencing issues with catheter leakage and obstruction, resulting in an ER visit where he was diagnosed with a urinary tract infection and required catheter replacement.
Expired Produce and Improper Food Storage
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to remove expired produce from the walk-in refrigerator and to store boxes of food in the walk-in freezer off the floor. Observations with the Dietary Manager (DM) revealed two plastic bags of bell peppers with splotchy brown/black spots and a fuzzy appearance, a bag of whole lettuce that was brown and contained off-colored liquid, and two boxes of grapes that were brown and mushy. The DM acknowledged that the expired produce should have been removed earlier. Additionally, two boxes of frozen food were found stored on the floor of the walk-in freezer, which the DM stated were overlooked during the last delivery day. The Administrator confirmed that the expired produce should have been disposed of and the food boxes should not have been left on the floor.
Latest citations in North Carolina
A cognitively impaired, exit-seeking resident with dementia, insomnia, gait abnormalities, orthostatic hypotension, and high fall risk repeatedly wandered at night and was known by staff to push on an emergency exit door. On two consecutive nights, the resident left the building unsupervised through a west hall emergency exit that had been manually left unlocked and with its door alarm turned off, so no alarm sounded when it was used. After the first elopement, the nurse and NA did not verify that the door’s lock and alarm were re-engaged, and no new monitoring was implemented, allowing the resident to exit again a few hours later. Maintenance later confirmed the door hardware and alarm were functioning properly and could only be disabled manually, meaning staff actions and inactions in securing and monitoring the door directly enabled both elopements.
Surveyors identified multiple failures in food labeling, storage, and sanitation, including dirty water spigots above the cooking range, a scoop stored with its handle in direct contact with rice, and unsealed croissants without open or use-by dates in a walk-in cooler. In three nourishment rooms, open food items such as a half-eaten creme pie with used forks, a reusable container of dressing, a pudding cup, a fast-food sandwich, and a milkshake were found without required open and/or use-by dates. The Dietary Manager reported that all nourishment room food must be labeled with both an open date and a 7-day use-by date and noted that new staff and nursing staff were not consistently labeling items as required.
A resident with severe cognitive impairment who used a wheelchair for mobility was observed being quickly pulled backward down a hallway while reclined in a geriatric chair, instead of being pushed forward in a dignified manner. The NA reported he pulled the chair backward because he felt it was harder to push forward, and he was unaware of any equipment problems. A SW later tested the same geriatric chair and found it functioned properly. Facility leadership, including the Staff Development Director, DON, and Administrator, stated that staff are educated on residents’ rights, dignity, and wheelchair use, and confirmed the expectation that residents be pushed forward in wheelchairs and geriatric chairs at a normal, dignified pace.
A resident with severe cognitive impairment and ADL deficits, including dependence on staff for bathing and grooming, was observed multiple times with long, stringy, visibly greasy and dirty hair despite being scheduled for twice-weekly showers. Nursing staff reported providing bed baths instead of full showers and only wetting the resident’s hair, while hospice staff provided intermittent bed baths with no-rinse shampoo and were unsure of the facility’s regular shower routine. The resident had not been to the beauty shop for hair care in over two months due to being mistakenly left off the beauty shop list. Facility leadership expected that the resident’s hair would be properly washed on scheduled shower days but could not identify when the hair was last washed, resulting in a failure to provide appropriate hair washing services.
Staff failed to follow Enhanced Barrier Precautions (EBP) by not wearing gowns during high-contact care activities for two residents on EBP. In one case, a nurse provided catheter care to a resident with an EBP sign and available PPE but wore only gloves, later stating she believed gowns were needed only when changing the catheter. In another case, two NAs used a mechanical lift to transfer a resident with a gastrostomy tube, again with EBP signage and PPE present, but wore only gloves; one NA stated he did not view transferring as high-contact care, and the other reported she did not always use gowns for transfers. These actions conflicted with the facility’s EBP policy and posted instructions requiring both gown and gloves for high-contact activities such as catheter care and transfers.
The facility failed to obtain and document informed consent for psychotropic medications for three residents. One resident with dementia and behavioral symptoms received quetiapine and divalproex, including a dose increase, without documented evidence that the responsible party was informed of risks and benefits or consented. Another resident with anxiety and depression, severe cognitive impairment, and disruptive behaviors was started on duloxetine and given multiple doses of PRN lorazepam, again without documentation that the responsible party was informed or consent obtained. A third cognitively intact resident with depression and anxiety received escitalopram 20 mg daily with no record that she was informed of the medication’s risks and benefits or that she consented. The Nurse Team Lead, identified as responsible for obtaining psychotropic consents, and the DON both confirmed that the expected notifications and consent documentation were not present in the medical records.
A resident with intact cognition was discharged to the community without a complete discharge summary that recapitulated the course of treatment. The electronic Transfer/Discharge Report contained basic demographic and clinical data but left key sections blank, including advanced directives, diet type/texture/fluid consistency, and resident-specific information on behaviors, ambulation, bladder/bowel status, feeding, and usual level of functioning, and lacked a signed acknowledgment that a copy was provided to the resident or representative. The SW reported she arranged post-discharge services, provided a medication list and satisfaction survey, and documented discharge arrangements, but was unaware that a comprehensive discharge summary with a recapitulation of the stay was required, and the Administrator confirmed the form used did not include this required summary with interdisciplinary input.
A resident admitted with bipolar disorder and receiving routine antipsychotic and antidepressant medications had only a prior Level I PASRR on file, with no Level II PASRR request submitted despite ongoing documentation of an active psychiatric diagnosis and psychotropic treatment in MDS assessments, NP notes, and the care plan. The SW confirmed she verified the existence of a PASRR before admission but did not request a Level II evaluation, believing it was only necessary if the resident exhibited behaviors, and the administrator acknowledged that no Level II PASRR request was made for this resident with a mental health diagnosis.
A resident with severe cognitive impairment and multiple comorbidities, including Alzheimer's disease, diabetes, severe protein-calorie malnutrition, chronic kidney disease, and hypertension, was not seen face-to-face by a physician within 30 days of admission as required. The resident was evaluated by a PA and later by an NP, but the Nurse Team Lead relied on a tracking report that combined all provider visits (NP, PA, and physician) without distinguishing physician-required visits. As a result, the resident did not appear on the physician-visit list when the physician was on-site and was inadvertently overlooked, a fact confirmed by both the Nurse Team Lead and the Administrator.
A resident with dementia, osteoporosis, and prior femur fracture experienced an unwitnessed fall and subsequently developed severe hip pain and decreased ability to ambulate and transfer. Nursing staff failed to document the fall on the day it occurred, did not complete comprehensive lower‑extremity or mobility assessments, and repeatedly charted pain scores of 0 despite the resident’s complaints and nurse aide reports of significant pain with movement and increased assistance needs. An NP evaluated the resident for hip pain but was not informed of the fall, did not assess the hips or legs, and treated the pain as baseline neuropathic discomfort. Over several days, PRN acetaminophen was given intermittently without consistent pain scoring, multiple shifts lacked progress notes or assessments, and aides assumed nurses were aware of the resident’s worsening pain and functional decline. Bilateral hip x‑rays were eventually ordered after internal communication about hip pain, and the report later showed an acute displaced femoral neck fracture, after which the resident was sent to the hospital and underwent a left hip hemiarthroplasty.
Unsecured Emergency Exit Allows Repeated Elopement of High-Risk Resident
Penalty
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to keep an emergency exit door secured and alarmed, which allowed a cognitively impaired, exit-seeking resident at high fall risk to leave the building unsupervised on two consecutive nights. The resident had dementia with psychotic disturbance, severe cognitive impairment, a history of wandering and exit-seeking, orthostatic hypotension, gait abnormalities, and muscle weakness. Care plans and assessments identified wandering, exit seeking, fall risk, and insomnia, and interventions included a wander guard bracelet, frequent safety checks, environmental monitoring, and redirection from exits. Despite this, the resident routinely wandered at night, roamed the halls, entered other residents’ rooms, and was known by staff to push on the emergency exit door in attempts to leave. On the first night, in the early morning hours while it was still dark, the nurse noticed the resident was no longer in the hallway or in his room. The assigned NA, positioned near the west hall emergency exit, reported hearing a door slam but assumed it was a nearby resident’s room door because the emergency door alarm had not sounded. When the nurse checked the emergency exit, he found it unlocked and non-alarming, exited through it, and after walking several minutes from the back of the building to the front, located the resident standing at the main entrance. The resident’s wander bracelet triggered the main entrance door alarm when they re-entered, confirming the bracelet was in place. The nurse believed the emergency door locked and re-armed automatically and did not verify the lock or alarm status of the door after the incident or before the end of his shift, and no additional monitoring or new interventions were implemented at that time. On the second night, the same nurse observed the resident in bed at approximately 1:30 AM, but by about 2:00 AM the resident was again missing from his room. The nurse immediately went to the same west hall emergency exit and saw the resident outside through the door’s glass, walking away from the building. The door was again unlocked and did not alarm when opened. The nurse brought the resident back inside through that door and assessed him with no injuries noted. Staff interviews and maintenance inspection confirmed that the emergency exit door’s magnetic lock was controlled by a wall switch and the red alarm box on the door could only be turned on or off with a key; the system did not malfunction and could not be defeated by holding the push bar. This meant the door’s lock and alarm had been manually disabled by staff on at least one prior shift, and staff on subsequent shifts, including nurses and NAs who were aware of the resident’s exit-seeking behavior and the first elopement, did not verify that the door was secured and alarmed, allowing the resident to exit a second time without staff knowledge.
Removal Plan
- Identify recipients who have suffered, or are likely to suffer, a serious adverse outcome as a result of the noncompliance
- Ensure Resident #89 has a wander bracelet in place
- Pursue or redirect Resident #89 back into the facility if he exits
- Assess Resident #89 for acute distress or injury after an elopement event
- Administer scheduled bedtime medications for insomnia (melatonin 3 mg and trazodone 50 mg) as ordered
- Initiate an order for checks of Resident #89’s whereabouts
- Document completion of checks on the Medication Administration Record
Improper Food Labeling, Storage, and Sanitation in Kitchen and Nourishment Rooms
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to properly label, date, and store food items and to maintain cleanliness in food preparation and nourishment areas. During an initial kitchen tour with the Dietary Manager, surveyors observed visible dirt and grime buildup on three water spigots above the cooking range and found a plastic scoop left in a rice bin with the handle and bottom in direct contact with the rice. In walk-in cooler #2, a cardboard flat of croissants had been cut open, with seven croissants already used, and the remaining croissants were not resealed or labeled with an open or use-by date. The Dietary Manager acknowledged that the open croissants had been missed by kitchen staff and that the rice scoop should have been stored in its designated holder on the bin. In three nourishment rooms, surveyors found multiple food items that were open but not properly labeled with open and/or use-by dates. In one nourishment room refrigerator, there was a half-eaten creme pie with three used plastic forks left in the pan and a small reusable container of ranch dressing, both open and unlabeled. In another nourishment room refrigerator, a vanilla pudding cup and a wrapped fast-food sandwich were open and labeled only with open dates, but no use-by dates. In a third nourishment room refrigerator, a fast-food milkshake was open with no open or use-by date. The Dietary Manager stated that all nourishment room food items were required to be labeled with both an open date and a use-by date set seven days after opening, and reported that some new staff were not labeling items correctly and that nursing staff often left items in nourishment refrigerators without appropriate labeling.
Resident Dignity Compromised During Transport in Geriatric Chair
Penalty
Summary
The deficiency involves a failure to maintain a resident’s dignity and right to a dignified existence and self-determination when a nurse aide transported the resident in a manner inconsistent with facility expectations. The resident, who had clear speech but severe cognitive impairment and required a wheelchair for mobility, was observed during a continuous observation being quickly pulled backward approximately 30 feet down the South Hall from the day room to her room while reclined in a geriatric chair. A reasonable person would have expected to be treated with dignity and to be wheeled forward in the chair. During interviews, the nurse aide stated he chose to pull the resident backward because he felt it was harder to push the reclined geriatric chair forward and reported no awareness of problems with the chair. The social worker later pushed the same geriatric chair forward and backward in the hallway and noted no functional concerns, stating the chair worked fine and needed no repairs. The Staff Development Director reported that staff receive education on residents’ rights, dignity, and wheelchair use, including speed and footrest use, and acknowledged the resident should not have been pulled backward in the geriatric chair. The DON and Administrator both stated they expected staff to push residents in wheelchairs and geriatric chairs forward, at a normal pace, and in a dignified manner.
Failure to Provide Adequate Hair Washing for Dependent Resident
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to provide adequate hair washing services for a dependent resident with ADL deficits. The resident was admitted with senile degeneration of the brain, COPD, and heart failure, and had a care plan identifying ADL deficits due to generalized weakness, with interventions including setup for hair and oral hygiene daily and assistance with bathing and dressing. An annual MDS showed the resident was severely cognitively impaired and required extensive staff assistance for ADLs, with no behaviors or rejection of care documented. The shower schedule indicated the resident was to receive showers twice weekly on specific mornings. However, multiple observations over several days showed the resident in bed with long, stringy, visibly greasy and dirty hair that was stuck flat against her head, including on a scheduled shower day. Record review showed documentation that the resident received a shower on one of the observed days, but the NA assigned that day reported she actually provided a bed bath rather than a full shower and typically only wet the resident’s hair, noting it was becoming tangled, especially in the back. The NA stated a hospice bathing team visited a couple of times a week and used a no-rinse shampoo, but she was unsure of their specific care for this resident. The hospice nurse confirmed providing bed baths with no-rinse shampoo a couple of times a week and was unsure of the facility’s regular shower routine for the resident. The beauty shop operator and unit secretary both indicated it had been longer than two months since the resident’s last beauty shop visit, and the unit secretary acknowledged the resident’s name had been left off the beauty shop list by mistake. The DON stated NAs were expected to bathe the resident twice weekly and was unaware of when the resident’s hair was last washed, while the administrator stated his expectation that the resident’s hair would be properly washed on scheduled shower days.
Failure to Use Required Gowns Under Enhanced Barrier Precautions During High-Contact Care
Penalty
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to follow its own Enhanced Barrier Precautions (EBP) policy requiring the use of gowns and gloves during high-contact resident care activities for residents on EBP. The written policy, revised on 7/26/2022, defined EBP as an infection control intervention to reduce transmission of multidrug-resistant organisms (MDRO) by using gowns and gloves during high-contact activities such as dressing, bathing, transferring, providing hygiene, changing linens or briefs, assisting with toileting, and device care or use, including urinary catheters and feeding tubes. Facility signage for EBP instructed staff to don a gown and gloves for high-contact resident care activities, and personal protective equipment (PPE), including gowns, was made available in holders at resident room doors. During an observation of catheter care for Resident #132, who was on EBP and had an EBP sign and PPE bin with gowns posted outside the room, Nurse #5 entered the room without wearing a gown. She washed her hands, donned gloves, removed the resident’s brief, and provided catheter care, then discarded supplies and gloves and washed her hands. In a subsequent interview, Nurse #5 acknowledged awareness that the resident was on EBP but stated she believed a gown was only required when changing the catheter, not when providing catheter care, and indicated she must have misunderstood the EBP instructions despite having received infection control training. In a separate observation, Resident #161’s room also had an EBP sign and PPE holder on the door, and the resident had a gastrostomy tube with tube feeding formula hanging at the bedside. When the resident returned from an outside appointment in a wheelchair, two nurse aides entered the room with a mechanical lift to transfer the resident to bed. Both aides wore gloves but did not wear gowns while completing the mechanical lift transfer. One aide stated he knew the resident was on EBP due to the gastrostomy tube but believed a gown was only required when performing “some type of care” and did not consider transferring to be a high-contact activity, even when shown the sign indicating gowns and gloves were required for transfers. The other aide, who usually worked on a different unit, stated she followed EBP signage but sometimes used a gown for transfers and not all the time, and both aides had previously received EBP and PPE training. The Infection Preventionist, DON, and Administrator each stated that staff should have worn gowns in these situations according to the posted EBP signage and facility expectations.
Failure to Obtain and Document Informed Consent for Psychotropic Medications
Penalty
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to obtain and document informed consent for psychotropic medications prior to initiation or dose changes for multiple residents. For one resident with unspecified dementia, anxiety disorder, depression, and delusional disorder, the physician ordered quetiapine for anxiety and agitation and later ordered divalproex for dementia with aggression and agitation, with a subsequent dose increase. The resident’s MDS showed moderate cognitive impairment, use of antipsychotic, antidepressant, and anticonvulsant medications, and behavioral symptoms including rejection of care. Record review showed these medications were administered as ordered, but there was no documentation that the responsible party was informed in advance of the risks and benefits of starting or increasing these psychotropic medications or that consent was obtained. Another resident with anxiety disorder and depression was started on duloxetine for depression and later had PRN lorazepam ordered for daytime and bedtime anxiety with agitation. The MDS indicated severe cognitive impairment, behavioral symptoms that interfered with social interactions and disrupted care, and use of anti-anxiety and antidepressant medications. The MAR confirmed that duloxetine was given as ordered and lorazepam was administered on multiple days. However, the electronic medical record contained no documentation that the responsible party was informed in advance of the risks and benefits of initiating duloxetine or lorazepam or that consent was obtained. The Nurse Team Lead, who was responsible for obtaining psychotropic consents, could not locate any consent forms for this resident and could not recall whether the responsible party had been called. A third resident with major depressive disorder and generalized anxiety disorder, and intact cognition per the MDS, had an active order for escitalopram 20 mg daily for depression and anxiety. The MDS showed no behavioral symptoms and receipt of antidepressant medication. Review of the medical record revealed no documentation that this resident was informed in advance of the risks and benefits of initiating escitalopram and consented to the treatment. In interviews, the Nurse Team Lead consistently stated she was responsible for obtaining psychotropic consents when new orders were received from providers, but she was unable to find consent forms for the involved residents or explain what had occurred. The DON described a process in which providers communicated new or changed psychotropic orders to the Nurse Team Lead, who was expected to notify residents or responsible parties and document the notification, but acknowledged that for these residents the required documentation and consent forms were missing.
Failure to Complete Required Discharge Summary With Recapitulation of Stay
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to complete a required discharge summary that included a recapitulation of the resident's stay for one resident who was discharged to the community. The resident was admitted to the facility and had a 5-Day MDS showing intact cognition and active discharge planning. A subsequent discharge-return not anticipated MDS documented that the resident was discharged to the community. Review of the electronic medical record showed an undated Transfer/Discharge Report containing demographic and clinical information such as date of birth, admission date, age, insurance, allergies, primary contact and physician information, diagnoses, most recent vital signs, and immunization history, with a notation to refer to the MAR for current medications. However, several sections of this report were left blank, including advanced directives, diet type/texture/fluid consistency, and resident-specific information on behaviors, ambulation, bladder/bowel status, feeding, and usual level of functioning. There was also no signature or date indicating the resident or representative received a copy of the Transfer/Discharge Report. In interviews, the SW reported she was responsible for long-term resident discharges while a Discharge Planner/Case Manager handled short-term discharges. The SW described her discharge process as arranging post-discharge needs such as follow-up appointments, home health, or equipment, providing a satisfaction survey and a list of medications with administration times, and documenting a progress note outlining discharge arrangements. She stated that when follow-up appointments were arranged, records including provider notes, therapy notes, and medication lists were faxed to the receiving provider. The SW also indicated she was not aware that a discharge summary including a recapitulation of the resident's course of treatment in the facility was required. The Administrator acknowledged that the Transfer/Discharge Report in use contained some required components but did not summarize the resident's course of treatment and that a discharge summary with input from all disciplines should have been completed per regulatory guidelines.
Failure to Request Level II PASRR for Resident With Bipolar Disorder
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to submit a request for a Level II PASRR evaluation for a resident with a serious mental health diagnosis. The resident was admitted with a diagnosis that included bipolar disorder and had only a Level I PASRR documented from an evaluation completed in 2022. The admission MDS indicated the resident was not considered by the state Level II PASRR process to have serious mental illness or intellectual disability, despite documenting an active bipolar disorder diagnosis and routine antipsychotic use. Subsequent psychiatric NP progress notes in 2024 and 2026 confirmed an active bipolar disorder diagnosis and ongoing treatment with aripiprazole and bupropion. The annual MDS again indicated the resident was not considered by the Level II PASRR process to have serious mental illness or intellectual disability, while also documenting routine antipsychotic and antidepressant use and a care plan addressing psychotropic medications related to bipolar disorder. The social worker, who had been in the role for five years and was responsible for ensuring newly admitted residents had a PASRR prior to admission, verified that she checked the state PASRR system before admission and confirmed the presence of a PASRR, but did not request a Level II evaluation at or after admission. She stated she was aware of the resident’s bipolar diagnosis and psychiatric referral but believed a Level II PASRR was only needed if the resident demonstrated behaviors, and she was not aware that a Level II evaluation was required when a resident was admitted with a mental health diagnosis and had only a Level I PASRR. The administrator also confirmed that no Level II PASRR request was made when the resident was admitted with a mental health diagnosis.
Failure to Ensure Timely Physician Visit After Admission
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to ensure that a resident was seen face-to-face by a physician within 30 days of admission, as required. The resident was admitted with multiple significant diagnoses, including Alzheimer's disease, dementia with agitation, diabetes, severe protein-calorie malnutrition, chronic kidney disease, and hypertension, and had severe cognitive impairment per a quarterly MDS assessment. Review of the electronic medical record showed no evidence that the resident had been seen by a physician within the required timeframe. Instead of a physician visit, the resident was seen by a PA and later by an NP shortly after admission. The Nurse Team Lead, who was responsible for tracking when physician regulatory visits were due, used a report from the computer system that listed the last date residents were seen by any provider (NP, PA, or physician). She manually marked which provider conducted the visit and used this list to inform providers which residents needed to be seen. Because the system did not distinguish physician visits from NP/PA visits on the tracking report, the resident did not appear on the physician-visit list when the physician was in the facility, and therefore was not scheduled for a physician visit. Both the Nurse Team Lead and the Administrator confirmed that the resident had not been seen by the physician and that this was an oversight.
Failure to Assess and Respond to Post‑Fall Hip Pain and Mobility Decline
Penalty
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to comprehensively assess, recognize, and respond to a resident’s severe hip pain and functional decline following a reported unwitnessed fall. The resident had dementia, osteoporosis, and a history of femur fracture, and was previously able to transfer and ambulate with limited assistance. On the date of the unwitnessed fall, there was no nursing progress note, no documentation of a fall, no pain complaint, and no assessment of the lower extremities or of transfers, ambulation, or mobility. Nursing documentation on that date reflected a pain score of 0, and the nurse assigned to the resident did not recall any fall, pain, or assessment. The quarterly MDS showed severe cognitive impairment and a prior fall, but no pain assessment. On the following night, a nurse documented that the resident was having “a lot of pain” in her hip and placed a note in the doctor’s book, but did not call the on‑call provider, did not document administration of any pain medication, and did not record a pain score with the complaint. The nurse aide on that shift did not recall changes, but the nurse later reported that the aide had told her the resident was unable to ambulate, which was a change from baseline. The next day, another nurse documented in a late entry that the resident reported she had fallen the previous day, pulled herself up, and had not told anyone, and that the resident screamed in pain when moved. This nurse contacted the NP, who, according to the note, stated the resident complained of pain all the time; the nurse informed him that this pain was not typical. The progress note did not include a pain level, a lower extremity assessment, or documentation that the unwitnessed fall was communicated to the NP. The NP’s own note documented nonspecific hip pain, a sleepy and groggy presentation, and neuropathic/hip pain, but did not include an assessment of the legs or hips. The NP later stated he was unaware of the fall, did not assess the hips or legs, and did not inquire about changes in condition such as pain with movement or ambulation. Over the next several days, multiple nurses documented pain scores of 0 on the MAR despite intermittent administration of PRN acetaminophen and reports from nurse aides that the resident had significant pain with transfers, ambulation, and repositioning. Nurse aides reported that the resident, who had previously been able to get up and ambulate, now required increased assistance, had difficulty transferring and ambulating, and grimaced and winced in pain during movement. One aide kept the resident in bed and provided all care in bed due to pain with movement, while another aide did not report the pain to the nurse, assuming the nurse was already aware. There were no nursing progress notes on some days documenting any assessment of the lower extremities or of the resident’s ability to transfer, ambulate, or move, and some assigned nurses did not enter any assessment notes at all. A nursing supervisor received a Stop and Watch communication about hip pain, obtained an order for bilateral hip x‑rays, but did not complete a comprehensive assessment and did not document a pain level or lower extremity assessment. The x‑ray order was entered, and bilateral hip x‑rays were completed, but pain scores of 0 continued to be documented on the MAR by nursing staff, and the unit manager assigned for part of one day did not assess the resident. A nurse aide who assisted with the x‑ray reported that repositioning the resident in bed was difficult due to pain and observed grimacing and wincing. The x‑ray report later showed an acute left femoral neck fracture with displacement. The nurse who came on duty the next day found the x‑ray report on the fax machine, noted the fracture, and contacted the provider, after which the resident was sent to the emergency department. The hospital history and physical documented that the resident endorsed hip pain on arrival and was treated with analgesics and later underwent a left hip hemiarthroplasty. The NP and Medical Director both acknowledged that there was potential for complications when a fracture remained undiagnosed for several days while the resident continued to be moved, transferred, and assisted with ambulation. The DON confirmed that the facility’s investigation determined that a nurse had been informed of an unwitnessed fall and failed to report the incident, resulting in a delay in treatment, and emphasized the importance of thorough assessment and documentation.
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Every citation, penalty and Plan of Correction is sourced from public CMS records (latest release May 27, 2026) and official state health department websites — never guesswork.
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