F0678 F678: Provide basic life support, including CPR, prior to the arrival of emergency medical personnel , subject to physician orders and the resident’s advance directives.
D

Failure to Maintain Accessible and Accurate POLST/Code Status Information During CPR Event

North Cascades Health And RehabilitationBellingham, Washington Survey Completed on 01-28-2026

Summary

The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure that Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment (POLST) and advance directives were readily accessible and accurately reflected in the electronic medical record (EMR) for use during emergencies. Facility policy required that POLST or advance directive forms be placed in a central, accessible binder on each unit and used to direct care during a code event, with a staff member assigned to obtain the resident’s code status from the binder. The policy also stated that residents have the right to formulate an advance directive and that, during admission, it is determined whether an advance directive is in place and a POLST is offered or assistance provided in completing one. Despite these policies, the facility did not maintain an effective system to ensure that POLSTs were consistently available in binders or accurately documented in the EMR. Resident 2, who had been admitted from the hospital, had a hospital discharge summary indicating a Do Not Resuscitate (DNR) status and referencing an advance care planning note. On the night of the incident, staff were summoned when Resident 2 was found on the floor, initially warm with a palpable radial pulse, short of breath, and later becoming unresponsive with no pulse. Staff attempted to locate the resident’s code status by checking the POLST binder and the EMR but were unable to find a POLST or any clear code status documentation. The Medication Administration Record directed staff to see a disaster recovery binder for advanced directives and code status, but no POLST for Resident 2 was present in the unit’s POLST book, and there was no documentation in the clinical record that code status had been discussed or that a POLST was in the chart. During the emergency, 911 was called, and the operator instructed staff to initiate CPR because no POLST could be located. CPR was started by staff and continued until paramedics arrived. While this was occurring, another nurse located information in the hospital discharge paperwork indicating that Resident 2 was DNR and wished for no CPR, at which point CPR was stopped. A collateral contact, the spouse of Resident 2’s roommate, reported that staff had verbally indicated the resident was DNR and that medics repeatedly asked for the POLST, which was reportedly only available online in the hospital file; medics later confirmed the hospital had a DNR on file and then stopped life-saving measures. Review of the second-floor POLST book showed that 23 of 52 residents on the unit had no POLSTs available, and multiple staff interviews confirmed that POLST binders were incomplete, not up to date due to room moves and workload, and that code status was not displayed in the EMR per company policy. Staff also reported that some POLSTs and advance directives were awaiting scanning, were stored in financial folders, or were otherwise not readily accessible to nursing staff, contributing to the inability to promptly verify Resident 2’s code status during the event. Additional interviews revealed systemic issues in the facility’s process for handling POLSTs and advance directives. Staff described that upon admission, nurses were expected to obtain POLSTs, review them with residents, and then send them for provider signature, after which copies were to be placed in binders and scanned into the EMR. However, staff acknowledged that there were missing POLSTs, a backlog of forms to be scanned, and inconsistent auditing of POLST binders, with some binders not audited for weeks. It was also noted that only certain floors were audited regularly and that some advance directives might be placed in financial folders that nurses would have difficulty accessing. At the time of surveyor observation, POLST binders were located at the reception desk, out of reach of nurses, while they were being audited, further limiting immediate access. These actions and inactions resulted in the facility’s failure to have an accurate, accessible system for code status information, directly affecting the care provided to Resident 2 during a cardiopulmonary emergency. The report states that this failure to access and follow POLST instructions for CPR or ensure the POLST was readily available for Resident 2 placed residents at risk for receiving unwanted CPR against their known wishes, avoidable trauma, and other negative health outcomes.

Penalty

Fine: $70,830
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The penalty, as released by CMS, applies to the entire inspection this citation is part of, covering all citations and f-tags issued, not just this specific f-tag. For the complete original report, please refer to the 'Details' section.

Resources

Below are regulatory guidelines relevant to this citation:

See other F0678 citations
Failure to Provide Required CPR and Activate EMS for Full Code Resident
J
F0678 F678: Provide basic life support, including CPR, prior to the arrival of emergency medical personnel , subject to physician orders and the resident’s advance directives.
Short Summary

A resident with multiple cardiopulmonary conditions and a documented full code status was found unresponsive without pulse or respirations during the night shift. A CNA notified the RN, who either instructed CNAs to clean and cover the resident or, per her and an LPN’s account, called a code blue and performed CPR with the LPN for about 20 minutes before stopping, without calling 911. The RN believed the resident was on hospice and did not verify code status, then notified the DON, provider, and family instead of EMS. Several hours later, after the DON called the facility and asked whether 911 had been contacted, the RN called 911 and briefly reinitiated CPR shortly before EMS arrived and pronounced the resident deceased, documenting postmortem changes. The facility’s investigation and root cause analysis found that staff failed to follow policy requiring immediate EMS activation and continuous CPR for full code residents until EMS arrival, leading to an Immediate Jeopardy finding.

No penalty information released
tooltip icon
The penalty, as released by CMS, applies to the entire inspection this citation is part of, covering all citations and f-tags issued, not just this specific f-tag. For the complete original report, please refer to the 'Details' section.
Failure to Initiate CPR for Resident With Unknown Code Status
J
F0678 F678: Provide basic life support, including CPR, prior to the arrival of emergency medical personnel , subject to physician orders and the resident’s advance directives.
Short Summary

A resident with multiple chronic conditions and severe cognitive impairment was found unresponsive and not breathing, with no documented code status, POLST, or DNR in the medical record. Nursing staff verified the absence of respirations and pulse but did not initiate CPR or call 911. An LPN reported she proposed starting CPR due to the unknown code status, but an RN declined. Leadership and clinical staff stated in interviews that facility practice and expectations are that, when a code status is unknown or no POLST is on file, the resident is to be treated as full code and CPR should be initiated.

No penalty information released
tooltip icon
The penalty, as released by CMS, applies to the entire inspection this citation is part of, covering all citations and f-tags issued, not just this specific f-tag. For the complete original report, please refer to the 'Details' section.
Inaccurate Crash Cart Audits and Missing Emergency Equipment
E
F0678 F678: Provide basic life support, including CPR, prior to the arrival of emergency medical personnel , subject to physician orders and the resident’s advance directives.
Short Summary

The facility failed to maintain accurate and complete crash cart audits for multiple full-code residents. Surveyors, accompanied by the DON, found that daily crash cart checks did not include verification of supply expiration dates, and that an extension cord documented as present on several audit dates was not actually in the cart. Audit logs also conflicted with the cart’s contents by indicating that required items such as eye protection, saline, and clear plastic were present when they were not. These findings were inconsistent with the facility’s policy requiring the crash cart to be checked every 24 hours and after each use, with prompt replacement of equipment and supplies.

No penalty information released
tooltip icon
The penalty, as released by CMS, applies to the entire inspection this citation is part of, covering all citations and f-tags issued, not just this specific f-tag. For the complete original report, please refer to the 'Details' section.
Failure to Initiate CPR and Contact EMS for Full Code Resident Found Unresponsive
J
F0678 F678: Provide basic life support, including CPR, prior to the arrival of emergency medical personnel , subject to physician orders and the resident’s advance directives.
Short Summary

A resident with NASH, diabetes, ascites, obesity, and a documented Full Code status was found unresponsive during early morning med pass, cool to the touch and without measurable vital signs. Her care plan and orders required staff to call 911 and start CPR and life-saving measures if she had no pulse or respirations, but the LPN and RN who assessed her did not initiate CPR, did not contact EMS, and did not verify her code status in the medical record at the time. The resident had not been checked for several hours overnight despite policies requiring at least q2h rounding for changes in condition. There was no documentation that she had been deceased for an extended period, no report of rigor mortis, and no evidence of any change in condition prior to being found unresponsive, resulting in a cited deficiency for failure to follow code status and emergency response policies.

No penalty information released
tooltip icon
The penalty, as released by CMS, applies to the entire inspection this citation is part of, covering all citations and f-tags issued, not just this specific f-tag. For the complete original report, please refer to the 'Details' section.
Failure to Verify and Honor DNR Status Before Initiating CPR
D
F0678 F678: Provide basic life support, including CPR, prior to the arrival of emergency medical personnel , subject to physician orders and the resident’s advance directives.
Short Summary

A resident with documented dementia, depression, coronary artery disease, and a clearly established DNR/DNI status on the care plan, orders, and MOLST was found unresponsive in the bathroom without pulse or respirations. An LPN, notified by a CNA, initiated CPR without checking the resident’s code status in the paper chart or EMR. When the RN supervisor arrived and asked about code status, the LPN incorrectly reported the resident as full code, and another RN assisted with chest compressions without verifying code status. Staff experienced confusion and delay locating the MOLST and paper chart, and EMS requested confirmation of the resident’s code status. The MOLST ultimately confirmed DNR/DNI, but CPR had already been performed until EMS consulted their provider and stopped the code, after which the resident was pronounced deceased.

No penalty information released
tooltip icon
The penalty, as released by CMS, applies to the entire inspection this citation is part of, covering all citations and f-tags issued, not just this specific f-tag. For the complete original report, please refer to the 'Details' section.
Failure to Provide Timely and Complete CPR to a Full Code Resident
J
F0678 F678: Provide basic life support, including CPR, prior to the arrival of emergency medical personnel , subject to physician orders and the resident’s advance directives.
Short Summary

A resident with multiple cardiac and renal conditions and a documented Full Code status was found unresponsive and not breathing by a transportation aide, who immediately sought help from an LPN and the assigned RN. The LPN refused to assist, stating it was not their resident, and the RN twice delayed responding despite being told it was an emergency, leading to a reported five- to ten-minute delay before any nurse entered the room. An LPN from another unit eventually initiated chest compressions, and other nurses joined, but no artificial respirations were provided at any time, even though the resident was apneic and an Ambu bag was available. This response did not follow the facility’s CPR policy or AHA guidelines for trained healthcare providers, which require full BLS with both compressions and rescue breaths for a Full Code resident prior to EMS arrival, and the situation was cited as Immediate Jeopardy with actual serious harm and subsequent death.

No penalty information released
tooltip icon
The penalty, as released by CMS, applies to the entire inspection this citation is part of, covering all citations and f-tags issued, not just this specific f-tag. For the complete original report, please refer to the 'Details' section.

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