The facility's own care plans required two staff members to help Resident 5 with bed mobility after the patient was placed on an air mattress in October. But nursing assistants continued providing one-person care, unaware that air mattress patients needed additional help regardless of their apparent mobility.

"The only resident she cared for who had an air mattress required a one person assist," Nursing Assistant 1 told federal inspectors on December 22, demonstrating the confusion that led to the incident. The assistant said she relied on shift change reports to learn about two-person requirements but hadn't been notified of any changes in care for air mattress patients.
Resident 5's provider ordered the air mattress on October 10. The facility had already established a care plan intervention on May 2 requiring "Hoyer lift for transferring with two person total assist." After the October order, managers should have ensured all bed mobility required two people, not just transfers.
They didn't.
CNA 2 revealed the systematic problem during her interview with inspectors. She said air mattress patients "could require a one- or two-person assist, depending on their individual ability to help with positioning." The assistant described caring for another air mattress patient who "required a one person assist because he could roll over and support himself."
This individualized approach directly contradicted the facility's post-incident policy requiring two-person assistance for all air mattress patients. The Director of Nursing confirmed that "because resident 5 was on an air mattress she should have been a two person assist at the time of the incident."
The DON's acknowledgment revealed the facility knew its staff were providing inadequate care. Only after the harmful incident did administrators update care plans for all air mattress residents and conduct emergency staff education.
"Following the incident, the facility updated the care plans for all residents using an air mattress to require a two person assist," the DON told inspectors. The facility scrambled to provide education at an all-staff meeting and sent nursing management to train individual employees.
The facility's corrective actions exposed how widespread the problem had become. Administrators completed a "building audit on all residents that are on an air mattress" on November 17, suggesting multiple patients were receiving improper care. They implemented mandatory in-service training to educate CNAs that "all residents that are on an air mattress need to be 2 person assist for bed mobility."
Management instituted intensive oversight, observing five staff members weekly for four weeks during bed mobility, transfers and repositioning. They planned to continue monthly observations for two additional months, indicating serious concerns about whether staff would follow the corrected procedures.
The facility's own electronic medical records contained the information staff needed. The DON said nursing assistants "could use the Kardex tool in the electronic medical records to determine if a resident is a one person or a two person assist." But the system only worked if staff knew to check it and managers ensured accurate information.
By November 15, more than a month after Resident 5's air mattress order, the facility finally updated the care plan to specify: "[Resident 5] has Air Mattress, needs two person assisted cares." The timing suggests the intervention came only after the incident that harmed the resident.
The facility's post-incident surveillance revealed ongoing compliance problems. The DON said "management had been making observations of cares and transfers to make sure they were doing the two person assist when care planned," acknowledging that staff education alone wasn't sufficient.
Air mattresses provide pressure relief for residents at risk of developing bedsores, but their unstable surface makes transfers and repositioning more dangerous without adequate assistance. The facility's own policies recognized this risk for transfers but failed to extend protection to bed mobility until after a resident was harmed.
Federal inspectors classified the violation as causing "actual harm" to "few" residents, indicating that while the number of affected patients was limited, the consequences were significant enough to warrant regulatory action and immediate correction.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Rocky Mountain Care - Hunter Hollow from 2025-12-22 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.