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Blumenthal Nursing: Delayed Femur Fracture Care - NC

GREENSBORO, NC - Federal inspectors cited Blumenthal Nursing & Rehabilitation Center after staff failed to recognize the urgency of a resident's fractured femur, resulting in a dangerous five-day delay before surgical treatment.

Blumenthal Nursing & Rehabilitation Center facility inspection

Critical Delay in Emergency Care

The violation occurred when a resident reported severe hip pain following a fall on November 17, 2024. Despite ordering an immediate X-ray, the facility did not complete the imaging until the following day, which revealed a nondisplaced transverse fracture of the left femur - a serious injury requiring immediate orthopedic intervention.

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Rather than recognizing the emergency nature of a fractured thigh bone, facility staff scheduled a routine orthopedic consultation for November 26 - nine days after the fall. The resident remained at the facility receiving only pain medication while the broken bone went untreated.

Medical Director Intervention

The situation only changed when the facility's Medical Director discovered the fracture during his rounds on November 22. Recognizing the severity, he immediately ordered the resident be transferred to the emergency department if orthopedic care could not be provided that same day.

The resident was finally evaluated by an orthopedic surgeon on November 22 and transferred directly to the hospital, where surgical repair with an intramuscular nail was performed on November 23 - six days after the initial injury.

Serious Complications Develop

During the delayed hospitalization, the resident experienced an aspiration event where stomach contents entered the lungs, causing acute hypoxic respiratory failure - a life-threatening condition characterized by dangerously low blood oxygen levels. This required immediate treatment with intravenous antibiotics starting November 24, followed by additional oral antibiotics after discharge.

Standard of Care Violations

Femur fractures represent orthopedic emergencies requiring immediate evaluation and treatment. The bone structure of the thigh is crucial for mobility and weight-bearing, and delays in treatment significantly increase the risk of serious complications.

According to medical protocols, patients with suspected hip fractures should receive immediate imaging and urgent orthopedic consultation within hours, not days. The femur is the longest and strongest bone in the body, and fractures typically result from significant trauma or underlying bone weakness.

Medical Risks of Treatment Delays

The orthopedic surgeon who treated the resident confirmed that injuries of this type require immediate hospital transfer for specialist evaluation. Extended delays in treating femur fractures create multiple serious health risks including deep vein thrombosis, pneumonia, and pressure ulcers.

Deep vein thrombosis occurs when blood clots form in major veins, particularly dangerous when patients remain immobilized with untreated fractures. Pneumonia risk increases due to reduced mobility and potential aspiration events, as occurred in this case. Pressure sores develop when patients cannot change positions due to untreated pain and immobility.

Assessment and Recognition Failures

The violation demonstrates systemic failures in clinical assessment and emergency recognition. Nursing staff failed to understand that any suspected hip fracture requires immediate action, regardless of X-ray scheduling constraints.

Proper protocols require immediate pain assessment, urgent imaging, and emergency orthopedic consultation for all suspected femur fractures. The facility's decision to schedule routine follow-up care for a confirmed fracture shows fundamental misunderstanding of orthopedic emergency principles.

Impact on Patient Safety

This incident affected one of five residents reviewed for fall-related injuries during the inspection. The delayed treatment resulted in preventable complications that extended the resident's hospitalization and recovery period.

Femur fractures in elderly nursing home residents carry significant risks even with prompt treatment. Delays compound these dangers by increasing surgical complexity, extending immobilization periods, and creating opportunities for secondary complications.

Regulatory Standards

Federal regulations require nursing homes to provide immediate care for medical emergencies and ensure appropriate specialist consultations. Facilities must maintain systems for recognizing urgent conditions and implementing rapid response protocols.

The violation highlights the need for comprehensive staff training on orthopedic emergency recognition and established protocols for urgent imaging and specialist consultation. Nursing homes must ensure clinical staff understand the difference between routine care needs and medical emergencies requiring immediate intervention.

Full Inspection Report

The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Blumenthal Nursing & Rehabilitation Center from 2025-01-09 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.

Additional Resources

🏥 Editorial Standards & Professional Oversight

Data Source: This report is based on official federal inspection data from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS).

Editorial Process: Content generated using AI (Claude) to synthesize complex regulatory data, then reviewed and verified for accuracy by our editorial team.

Professional Review: All content undergoes standards and compliance oversight by Christopher F. Nesbitt, Sr., NH EMT & BU-trained Paralegal, through Twin Digital Media's regulatory data auditing protocols.

Medical Perspective: As emergency medical professionals, we understand how nursing home violations can escalate to health emergencies requiring ambulance transport. This analysis contextualizes regulatory findings within real-world patient safety implications.

Last verified: February 4, 2026 | Learn more about our methodology

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