Wheelchair Injuries: 9 Types of Nursing Home Neglect
Wheelchair Injuries: 9 Types of Nursing Home Neglect
For individuals with limited mobility, a wheelchair is not just a piece of equipment; it is a key to independence, dignity, and quality of life. When properly managed, it enables freedom. However, when caregivers or facilities fail in their duty of care, this essential tool can become a source of severe, life-altering injuries.
Wheelchair neglect is a serious form of negligence where a healthcare provider’s failure to provide appropriate wheelchair-related care leads to patient harm. This form of nursing home neglect is not always intentional—it often stems from systemic issues like understaffing, inadequate training, or simple oversight—but the consequences for the resident are just as devastating. Below, we break down nine distinct types of wheelchair negligence, outlining the specific care failure and the serious harm that can result from elder abuse.
Nine Types of Wheelchair Negligence
1. Improper Sizing and Fitting
- The Care Failure: This occurs when a resident is placed in a wheelchair that is not correctly fitted to their body. This includes a seat that is too wide, too narrow, or has an incorrect depth; footrests that are positioned too high or too low, leaving feet dangling or knees pushed up; or a backrest that provides inadequate postural support. This is a clear case of improper wheelchair sizing.
- Resulting Harm: An ill-fitting chair forces the body into unnatural, stressful positions. A seat that is too wide encourages slumping, which can compromise breathing and digestion, while also creating shearing forces on the skin as the user slides. A chair that is too small creates intense, localized pressure points, causing nerve compression, restricting vital circulation, and leading directly to the development of painful pressure sores.
2. Failure to Provide Essential Accessories
- The Care Failure: This is the failure to equip a wheelchair with accessories that are medically necessary for the user’s safety and health. This often involves neglecting to provide a pressure-relieving cushion for a resident with fragile skin, or failing to install safety features like seatbelts for a resident with poor trunk control or anti-tipper bars for a resident who is unstable.
- Resulting Harm: Without a proper cushion, the constant pressure on the tailbone and hips can create deep, painful pressure ulcers (bedsores) in a matter of hours. The absence of a seatbelt can lead to a resident sliding forward and falling, while missing anti-tippers can cause the chair to flip backward during propulsion, leading to catastrophic head trauma. These are not luxury add-ons; they are vital components of a safe care plan.
3. Lack of Routine Maintenance
- The Care Failure: A wheelchair is a mechanical device that requires regular upkeep. This form of neglect involves failing to perform routine inspections and maintenance, such as checking tire pressure, tightening loose bolts, inspecting the frame for cracks, and ensuring that moving parts like wheel bearings are lubricated. This is a prime example of wheelchair maintenance neglect.
- Resulting Harm: Gradual wear and tear leads to sudden, preventable injuries. Underinflated or worn-out tires make the wheelchair sluggish and difficult to propel, forcing the user to exert excessive force, which is a direct cause of debilitating shoulder injuries and rotator cuff tears. A loose bolt or a crack in the frame can lead to a complete structural failure, causing the chair to collapse and injure the resident.
4. Ignoring Equipment Breakdowns and Malfunctions
- The Care Failure: This is a more acute form of neglect where caregivers continue to use a wheelchair despite knowing it has broken or malfunctioning parts. This includes using a chair with faulty brakes that don’t fully engage, a wobbly wheel that affects stability, a broken armrest that offers no support, or a torn, sagging seat that creates a hammock effect.
- Resulting Harm: This failure poses an immediate and severe safety risk. Brake failure is a leading cause of falls during transfers, often resulting in broken hips, fractures, and lengthy hospitalizations. A broken armrest can detach unexpectedly as a resident puts weight on it, causing them to lose their balance and fall. A sagging seat provides zero postural support, altering pelvic tilt and concentrating all the user’s weight onto their tailbone, making pressure injuries almost inevitable.
5. Failure to Reposition the User
- The Care Failure: Many wheelchair users lack the strength or mobility to shift their own weight. This negligence occurs when caregivers fail to assist these individuals with repositioning every 15-30 minutes. This creates prolonged, uninterrupted pressure on the same areas of the skin, cutting off blood flow and starving the tissue of oxygen.
- Resulting Harm: This is a primary cause of Stage IV pressure ulcers—deep, open wounds that can tunnel down to expose muscle and bone. These injuries are excruciatingly painful, are highly susceptible to life-threatening infections like sepsis and osteomyelitis (bone infection), and can require months of intensive medical treatment, including painful surgical procedures like debridement and skin grafts. These are tragic wheelchair injuries.
6. Unsafe Transfer Practices
- The Care Failure: This involves caregivers failing to follow established safety protocols when helping a resident move in and out of their wheelchair. Common failures include forgetting to lock the brakes before the transfer, not using a gait belt to provide a secure hold, rushing the process, or attempting a transfer with insufficient staff assistance for the resident’s needs. These are unsafe patient transfers.
- Resulting Harm: Transfer-related falls are one of the most common and dangerous events in a nursing home. These falls can be catastrophic, leading to traumatic brain injuries, spinal cord damage, and complex fractures that may require surgery and result in a permanent loss of mobility. Beyond the physical injury, a bad fall can create a deep-seated fear that leads to social isolation and a decline in overall well-being.
7. Inadequate Propulsion Assistance
- The Care Failure: This neglect occurs when a resident with limited upper body strength is forced to manually propel their wheelchair over long distances, up steep ramps, or across difficult surfaces like thick carpeting without any offer of assistance from staff.
- Resulting Harm: The immense and repetitive strain placed on the delicate joints of the shoulders is a direct cause of severe musculoskeletal injuries. This includes painful rotator cuff tears, bursitis, and shoulder impingement, which can severely limit a person’s remaining independence and may ultimately require surgical intervention. It robs the resident of their autonomy and can lead to feelings of frustration and helplessness.
8. Ignoring User-Reported Issues
- The Care Failure: This happens when a resident voices a concern about their wheelchair—such as pain, discomfort, or a mechanical problem—and their complaints are dismissed, downplayed, or ignored by staff. This is a failure to listen to and respect the person most familiar with the equipment.
- Resulting Harm: Ignoring a resident’s report allows a minor, fixable issue to escalate into a major injury. A complaint about discomfort could be the earliest warning sign of a developing pressure sore. A report of a “wobbly wheel” or “sticky brake” could precede a catastrophic fall. This failure to listen is not only negligent care but a profound disrespect to the resident’s dignity.
9. Lack of Staff Training
- The Care Failure: This is a systemic failure on the part of the facility to adequately train its staff on all aspects of wheelchair safety. This includes a lack of hands-on training on how to properly fit a resident for a chair, how to conduct and document routine safety inspections, and how to perform safe transfer techniques for residents with different needs.
- Resulting Harm: When staff is not properly trained, all other forms of neglect become more likely. This institutional-level failure is often the root cause of individual injuries, creating a facility-wide environment where resident safety is consistently compromised. It demonstrates a lack of commitment to providing a safe standard of care.
Taking Action Against Neglect
If you suspect a loved one is suffering from any form of wheelchair neglect, it is vital to act. The first step is to document everything, including photographing the injuries and the condition of the wheelchair, and keeping a detailed log of complaints and the dates you noticed problems. Next, you should report it immediately by bringing your concerns to the facility’s director of nursing and administration and submitting your complaint in writing. It is also crucial to seek medical care for your loved one from an independent doctor to treat the injuries and properly document the harm. Finally, you should consult an attorney; an experienced elder abuse attorney can investigate the situation, hold the facility accountable, and help you secure compensation for medical bills, pain, and suffering through a nursing home neglect lawsuit. Taking legal action against a nursing home is often the only way to get justice for these injuries.
The Powless Law Firm is an Indiana law firm that represents victims and families statewide in serious cases involving wheelchair or nursing home neglect, birth injury, medical negligence, personal injury, and wrongful death. If you have concerns about nursing home negligence, please contact an experienced Indiana nursing home neglect attorney at (877) 769-5377. Together, we can make a difference.
The Powless Law Firm represents families across Indiana—from Indianapolis to Fort Wayne and Evansville—in cases involving birth trauma lawsuits, medical malpractice birth injury claims, and cerebral palsy lawsuits. As experienced medical malpractice attorneys in Indiana, we are here to listen to your story and help you find the way forward.
Call (877) 469-2864 now for a free, confidential consultation. There is no fee unless we win your case.