Mount Carmel Care Center Fall Injury Violation - MA
LENOX, MA - A state inspection at Mount Carmel Care Center revealed serious failures in fall prevention protocols, nutritional monitoring, and basic medical oversight that left vulnerable residents without proper care for extended periods.
Repeated Falls Without Proper Intervention
Mount Carmel Care Center failed to protect a resident who experienced eight documented falls over four months, including incidents that resulted in skin tears and a head laceration requiring emergency room treatment. Despite the facility's own fall prevention policy requiring care plan updates and assessments after each fall, staff repeatedly failed to implement these basic safety measures.
The resident, who had been identified as high fall risk upon admission in November 2024 with a history of compression fractures and mobility issues, fell on December 1, February 9, March 4, March 13, March 31, April 5, April 6, and April 13. The April 5 incident was particularly serious - an unwitnessed fall that resulted in a head laceration and emergency room evaluation.
Fall prevention in nursing homes requires systematic assessment and intervention adjustment after each incident. When a resident falls repeatedly, it indicates that current interventions are inadequate and need immediate modification. The failure to reassess and update care plans after falls creates a dangerous cycle where residents remain at risk for increasingly serious injuries. Each fall increases the likelihood of fractures, head injuries, and other complications that can lead to permanent disability or death in elderly populations.
According to the facility's Director of Nursing during the inspection, "the care plan had not been updated after a fall occurred" on five separate occasions between February and April 2025. Additionally, no incident reports were completed for six of the eight falls, and no fall assessments were performed for two incidents - direct violations of the facility's own policies and standard nursing practice.
Critical Nutritional Care Breakdown
A resident admitted with protein-calorie malnutrition experienced continued weight loss while the facility failed to implement prescribed nutritional interventions or notify physicians of the declining condition. The resident lost approximately 10% of body weight within weeks, meeting clinical criteria for severe malnutrition that required immediate medical intervention.
The facility's dietitian recommended a nutritional supplement regimen of four ounces twice daily on March 9, 2025, after identifying the resident was consuming only 25-50% of meals. However, this critical intervention was never implemented. Weight records showed alarming fluctuations and overall decline: from 99 pounds at admission in February to 89.2 pounds by mid-April - a loss exceeding both the 5% monthly and 7.5% quarterly thresholds that define significant weight loss requiring immediate intervention.
Unaddressed weight loss in elderly residents with existing malnutrition creates a cascade of health complications. Protein-calorie malnutrition weakens the immune system, delays wound healing, increases infection risk, and accelerates muscle wasting. This leads to increased fall risk, pressure ulcer development, and can trigger organ failure. The combination of existing compression fractures and progressive malnutrition placed this resident at extreme risk for additional fractures and life-threatening complications.
The facility's dietitian stated during the inspection that "she was unable to find evidence that the recommendation for the 4 oz. house supplement recommended was implemented." Neither the dietitian nor the attending physician were notified of the resident's significant weight loss, despite facility policies requiring such notification.
Physician Visit Requirements Ignored
The same malnourished resident went without any documented physician visit for over two months after admission, despite Medicare requirements mandating physician evaluation within specific timeframes. This represents a fundamental breakdown in medical oversight that left a medically complex resident without proper physician assessment during a period of active weight loss and declining health status.
Medicare regulations require physician visits at least every 30 days for skilled nursing residents, with the initial comprehensive visit required shortly after admission. These visits are essential for assessing treatment effectiveness, adjusting medications, and identifying emerging medical problems before they become critical. For a resident with multiple compression fractures and diagnosed malnutrition, the absence of physician oversight for two months represents a serious deviation from acceptable medical practice.
The facility's physician acknowledged during the inspection that he "found it hard to believe that he had not seen Resident #28 at this point but could not recall when he last saw" the resident. The Director of Nursing confirmed finding no evidence of required physician visits in the medical record.