The September incident at Cobalt Lodge Health Care and Rehabilitation Center occurred because nursing staff failed to update care instructions after the resident's mobility status changed, federal inspectors found.

Physical Therapist #1 had discharged Resident #1 from therapy services on August 29, documenting that the patient was "non-ambulatory" and required assistance from one staff member for transfers. The therapist entered a status change into physician orders stating the resident was "not functionally ambulatory" and communicated this change to nursing staff.
But the nursing aide care card was never updated to reflect the resident's deteriorated condition.
Director of Nursing explained during a September 26 interview that once a resident's ambulation status appeared in physician orders, nurses were responsible for updating the aide care cards. She acknowledged the care card for Resident #1 failed to identify the patient's ambulation status both before and after the August 29 change.
The card only listed a wheelchair and walker as adaptive equipment. The ambulation section was left blank.
Nursing Assistant #1 told the director he entered the resident's room and saw both the wheelchair and walker. Based on seeing the equipment, he decided to help Resident #1 out of bed using the walker to ambulate to the bathroom.
The assistant reported the resident was walking in front of him. He did not use a gait belt.
The resident fell.
Physical Therapist #1 explained the patient had suffered a subdural hematoma and subsequent deconditioning from the fall. The resident's status deteriorated significantly. Where the patient previously required assistance from one staff member for transfers, they now require a Hoyer lift for all transfers and staff support just to sit upright.
The facility's own Transfer and Ambulation Policy required care plans to reflect each resident's current functional status, transfer method, and ambulation ability. The policy specifically stated gait belts were to be used unless contraindicated.
None of this happened for Resident #1.
The disconnect between therapy orders and nursing care created a dangerous gap. The physical therapist had clearly documented the resident could only ambulate with therapy staff and was later downgraded to non-ambulatory status. This information reached physician orders and nursing staff was notified.
But the nursing assistant who actually provided hands-on care never received updated instructions. Instead of consulting current orders or asking supervisors about the resident's mobility restrictions, the aide made assumptions based on equipment visible in the room.
The presence of both a wheelchair and walker suggested to the assistant that the resident could use either device. Without checking care plans or physician orders, he chose the walker and attempted to help the resident walk to the bathroom.
Federal inspectors found this represented actual harm to the resident. The original therapy discharge on August 29 had already identified significant mobility limitations. The resident required one-person assistance for transfers and could not walk independently.
The subsequent fall and brain injury represented a catastrophic deterioration. A patient who previously needed help standing and moving short distances now cannot transfer without mechanical assistance or maintain sitting balance without staff support.
Inspectors attempted to interview both the registered nurse and nursing assistant involved but were unsuccessful in reaching them.
The case illustrates how communication failures between departments can have devastating consequences for vulnerable residents. Physical therapy had properly assessed the resident's declining mobility and updated medical orders accordingly. The breakdown occurred when this critical safety information failed to reach the frontline staff providing daily care.
The resident's condition following the fall demonstrates the severity of subdural hematomas in elderly patients. What began as a mobility limitation requiring modest assistance became a profound disability requiring mechanical lifts and constant supervision for basic positioning.
Facility policy clearly anticipated this type of incident. The Transfer and Ambulation Policy specifically required current functional assessments to guide care planning and mandated gait belt use during transfers. Had these policies been followed, the nursing assistant would have known the resident was non-ambulatory and required different safety measures.
The August 29 therapy discharge created a clear timeline. Physical Therapist #1 had documented the resident's non-ambulatory status, entered physician orders, and communicated with nursing staff. Nearly a month passed before the fall occurred, providing ample time for proper care card updates and staff notification.
Instead, the resident paid the price for the facility's failure to maintain accurate care instructions and ensure frontline staff understood each patient's current mobility restrictions and safety requirements.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Cobalt Lodge Health Care and Rehabilitation Center from 2025-09-29 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.
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