Ever since I put my mother in the nursing home, I can't believe how many times they have called to tell me she has fallen.
Just recently, they called and told me while they were giving her physical therapy, she rolled off the bed right onto the hard floor!
How frustrating. She is in her 90's. Poor thing. Sadly, it doesn't seem there is much I can do about it. They always give lame excuses.
Anyone else having the same problem?
How many times does a patient have to fall before anything can be done?
I talked to the Administrator in October, the last time she fell, and asked for
a customized chair, which I figured that maybe she can be tilted back a little
to help prevent falls. They finally had her fitted, but who knows how long it
will take for her to get her new chair.
Can a complaint be filed for such negligence? If so, with what organization?
I just can't comprehend how many times my mother has fallen out of her
wheelchair. They certainly are not paying close attention to the elderly folks.
I can understand one fall her or there, but not every time I turn around!
Does your mons wheelchair have foot rests? They are a mixed blessing...something else to trip over if she tries to get out of it, but they also can help keep her positioned. PT also got Mom a thing called a foot buddy which is a pad that attaches to the top of the foot rests to converts them into one solid foot pad. The PT dept probably has these in stock and it might help while waiting for a new chair.
Have you talked to the Ombudsman? Mine was helpful putting the pressure on the staff to get moms chair changed to a smaller one with padding to help keep her positioned. I dealt with her a lot during moms many falls. Their contact information is required to be posed.
Also do they have to send her to the ER with every fall? If someone was a witness in the dining room and she didn't hit her head or have other obvious trauma, do they have to send her? Just more trauma sometimes.
Maybe suggest to them the med mizer allcare bed? It can be lowered to the floor and comes with a 10" high safety mat to place on either or both sides of the bed to help reduce possible injuries.
I hope this helps!!!
her wheelchair this time and fell on her face and arms. They sent her to the hospital to get checked out. They took tons
of xrays and had her their all afternoon. I finally got her back to the nursing home and tucked away in bed. I asked the Night Nurse that I want them to get her a Geri Chair since they can't seem to put her in bed in a timely manner.
Of course, he is going to pass my message along to the Head Nurse tomorrow. I will need to follow up. AGAIN,
she was very lucky not to have broken anything. I am so
upset. I hope it will not be a big ordeal for them to get
her a Geri chair in the next couple of days, but I'm not
holding my breath.
purchase one and they said they did not like them or found them ineffective?
So what about the hall moniter at nite...he cannot see into the room if someone
is on the floor????meaning the bed by the window,u cannot see when someone is on the floor......….The senior was simply trying to get up, off the bed is this
a crime...I can say that if u go with this its simply compliance with inmates...
the nursing home wants the patient on the wheel chair or lying down no movement in the NH...………so your senior will become weaker...……..………...
around 9ish to tell me my Mom fell off the bed. Oh my. They
ordered xrays for her knees and foot. I feel so sorry for her.
How many falls can a 91 year old take before something
serious happens?
So she’s got the mats, that’s good. Is lowering the bed to the floor on her documented care plan? If so I would be raising Cain. The chances of the One Bad Fall increase with the number of just OK falls. As I left Moms Care Plan meeting today my parting comment was “Keep her off the floor”.
lowers to the ground and that has matts around it. They do not always lower it. Quite a bit of turn over with the aides.
Today I read an article by Riley Griffin dated 10/9/2018. The title is:
Nursing Homes Are Pushing the Dying Into Pricey Rehab in Bloomberg Paper. It should be online. Anyhow not only does it confirm what I witnessed but showed how the rehabs are pushing the dying who only lived 30 days more of their life into what he called ultra excessive high rehab. The main reason is the money. Medicare is placing an impossible requirement on our elderly to perform what they can not. And the way the money scam part really shows up is that only the for profit rehabs are exploiting the system and our elderly parents. I have a voice mail from many I saved to get to hear her voice after she passed that I did not realize at the time due to my exhaustion that Im still feeling guilt,none the less.
By this time my mom had been on a puree diet for a year,too weak to chew food but hey she can do rehab. And my mom is an over achiever so she wants to please. Her weight after it being over 3 years from her stroke keeping her in a wheel chair was in the 78 lb weight range. The voicemail is telling me as she is crying that the physical therapist wants her to take more steps with a walker & my mom can not even lift her right leg,period. They had her in a wrong sized wheel chair and told her that she can not get a new right sized one if she did not continue her therapy. Like I said in my other post,I saw many residents fall from being over required of. My mom was already so weak and she passed a month later. Never did get her wheelchair she was desperately needing. And I never knew it was the wrong size all that time. I used to tell my mom in her frail condition that I wish just for one day they had to experience what they put you through. And the intense pain that would last in her muscles from being over worked, or at her weight,I dont think she had muscle anymore. For money,they are making their already difficult last days,horrific.
Believe it or not, I am going to begin going into ALF's as a social worker and hope I can make a difference in the lives of residents that I did not know to do for my mom.
the elderly are being taken advantage of just so the nursing homes can make more profit.
If I have a client who is continually falling in a home one question I have is are there enough staff at the home to monitor the residents?
I have a few clients who can fall every day, sometimes several times a day. Some of these clients are competent. The problem is that these residents refuse to wait for the staff to assist them when they need help claiming that they have to wait 30-60 (or longer) minutes for staff to respond. What I have to determine is are they really having to wait that long (possibly short staffing issues), or are do they have unrealistic expectations and expect the staff to respond immediately to their requests for help? I have seen both.
The staff are required in a home that accepts Medicare/Medicaid to do Care Plans every three months or when there is a significant change in their condition (repeated falls would qualify for this.) If a resident is falling it should be addressed in the Care Plan and the staff should come up with an "action plan" to address the issue. The staff must try all options to keep the resident safe. They may lower the bed and put a mat on the floor, if the resident falls out of bed, they may utilize a personal safety alarm to notify them when a resident stands up if the resident is falling out of a wheelchair, there are many options the staff may try. However, if the resident is competent they may refuse any intervention the staff may want to try, and that is their right.
I had a client who was in a skilled home and she would fall one or two times a day. She was competent and refused any intervention the staff attempted to put into place. Again, she had a right to refuse. The staff documented every fall, and called the family and doctor. One concern the family had was that the home would attempt to discharge her stating that they could not meet her needs. I assured the family that the home could not discharge her due to this because she had a right to refuse. However, we did let the home know that we were aware that she was refusing their help and that we did not hold them responsible for her falls or any injury that occurred as a result of those falls, (and some of those falls did result in injury such as broken bones.)
Some long-term care facilities are "restraint free." Although these homes must still do the Care Plans, they will not offer any type of restraint to help with the situation. Some homes will tell a family it is against the law to restrain. This is NOT true! Restraints can be used when needed to treat a medical condition with a doctor's order. However, there are very strict rules on when a restraint can be used and if used guidelines to follow when they are in use. Families should ask a home when they are looking to admit a loved one if they are "restraint-free?" I have heard some of these "restraint-free" homes tell families that their residents "have a right to fall. Although I think they could explain their policy better it is true.
under their care. She's fallen while being transferred from wheelchair to
the bath chair, she has fallen off bed they use for physical therapy while
she is right under their care, etc. My mother is not feisty or difficult. She
is a quiet and sweet lady.
I cant blame the home for that. After a few years he didnt try anymore thank goodness.
A cna takes care of about 12 residents. There is no way they can be in the room with them 24/7. Its just not possible.
My dad was a falls risk in the hospital before the nursing home. He was brought in because of a bad fall. They put him in a room down a long hall. No other rooms around. He was in the back bed with with curtain dividing the room. You couldnt even see him from the doorway. He fell and had a skull fracture. The hospital didnt bother to call me! I had to ask a nurse why he was talking jibberish. It was brain swelling. He could talk fine b4 that happened. So it can even happen in a big hospital.
The only thing the nursing home can do is to put the mats down and have the bed at the lowest setting. Ive never seen them use a bed alarm. If he stood up it only takes a second for a fall. Even if the bed alarm sounded, the cna cant get there fast enough to grab him. Its impossible.
Even a paid 1 on 1 caretaker could go to the bathroom, and they could fall. You cant blame the caretaker if they have to use the facilities. Things happen. Plus if they have dementia, they might not know what they are doing. They could be thinking their 6 years old again and walking in a field somewhere. You never know.
I know a physio that was walking a pt. The pt fell and had a hip fracture. The person was in their 90s. The family was blaming him. I wouldnt because accidents are just that. Accidents. At 90 your bones are like twigs. Falls are a real problem with seniors. You just hope for the best. Sometimes the elderly will deliberatly wait till they are alone to get up out of bed. They know they arent supposed to get up. They used to tie the residents in bed, but that is concidered inhumane and not done any more.
The only thing you can count on is that after a fall, that 100% certainty they will fall again. You just hope they dont.
hurting themselves to a point of no return. It's so sad to see how nursing homes get away with so much. And it's sad to see how few CNA's they have available to care for the elderly.
If you research falls in the elderly, you will find that either in a nursing home or in their own home, it is the #1 cause of hospitalization. Much of this problem can be tied to some normal decline due to aging(decreased senses, loss of balance, loss of muscle tone) There can be medications that compromise the senses too. Complicated problem! Can't watch 24/7.
As said, by law they have to call you. Maybe its time for a wheelchair with an alarm. My Moms bed had mats on each side and lowered almost to the floor. She also had a mattress that was concaved to help with her not being able to get out.
Your mom is falling because someone is there all the time to see it - she might have being some minor falls before that she didn't tell anyone about - my mom fell out of bed a few weeks ago so now there are mats on both sides of the bed & the bed is in lowest position if she will be there alone so as to make any future fall minimized
Be grateful that they call & tell you rather than hiding things from you so many the 'lame excuses' are really accurate accounts - here they need to write a report on all falls that the NH submits to the Ministry of Health as they are tracked & if they see a trend then a procedural policy is initiated
Also I saw the physical therapists in several ALF's so over work the residents that they are weak and in pain after therapy. When the resident complains,they push them harder & think they are being too helpless. Its a no win.
Then they fall because they are too weak to support themselves. The resident is motivated to try to get better so when the physical therapist threatens to remove therapy from them,they keep trying until they eventually fall.
I saw this in 12 different facilities on a regular basis.
I understand they are always low on aids & some aids hide out with their cell phones while some come slowly to the room on purpose hoping the resident will have handled the situation themselves,so they dont have to do anything.
It was one of the hardest things I have ever had to watch,over & over.
No director or staff memmber would listen to me about it or if they did,it was just to yes me,and continue things the same. At times my mom was fearful because when I spoke to someone,she was punished for it,with longer waits. So sad.
The NH was eventually fined for neglect and sold but from what I understand the same problems still exist.
We live in a small town with very few choices. Wanted Mom to stay for a week so I could go on a much needed respite but am having second thoughts.
Won't be worth it if they take her underwear off and tell her to pee the bed. Re training her to toilet herself once home again is so confusing for her. :(
Aging is not pretty.....
The memory care facility where has lived for 6 momths calls every time he falls. Usually just to inform us that he fell and everything is ok or they had to put a bandage somewhere.
At our last care meeting, we were told falls are very common when the elderly person is still a little bit mobile on their own. They said the falls might not decrease until he is completely wheelchair bond.
There is a motion sensor on his bed and the bed is very close to the floor.
It is so hard to watch the mental and physical decline in a man that was so strong before Alzheimers.
Is she using a walker or wheelchair. How is it she is falling?
my dad has an air pad overlay on his bed to prevent sores but it also has curved sides to prevent rolling out. I agree with rocketjcat's suggestions!
If bed, use fall mats on both sides; lower the bed to the lowest position; ask for a wider bed instead of the normal skinny twin; pad under the sheets with rolled up towels or blankets to make a well; move everything away from the bed when she’s sleeping; pad any sharp corners on air conditioner units etc.
If wheelchair, make sure it’s properly sized, not too wide; ask for a chair pad that has a lot of traction; don’t use footrests if they would be a tripping hazard if she’s trying to stand up.
he wears an alarm and has a mat next to his bed
Sunday night I heard a beeping from mom's room and walked down the hall to see him wobbling in his room just in time to see him fall
My Mom fell once right in front of me. One minute she was walking fine, the next she fell flat. And yes, the nursing home was phoning me all the time too. I'd come rushing over and everyone was mystified. I think this is par for the course at this age.
Unfortunately, the nursing home staff can't be everywhere at once.
If you are concerned about your mom’s frequent falls, call a Care Conference. Have the therapists, any aides who have contact with her, the Director of Nursing and even someone from administration. Be calm but firm and tell them you are concerned Mom may become seriously injured and you don’t want to report them, but if it continues, you may have to. Work with them to find a solution. In my mom’s case, they were able to move her room right across from the nurse’s station where they could observe her better.