F0684 F684: Provide appropriate treatment and care according to orders, resident’s preferences and goals.
J

Failure to Recognize and Respond to Resident’s Change in Condition Leading to Sepsis and Hospitalization

Benedictine Care CommunityAda, Minnesota Survey Completed on 03-05-2026

Summary

The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to identify and act on a resident’s change in condition despite clear signs of acute illness and a care plan for potential infection. The resident had intact cognition per the annual MDS and no baseline hallucinations, delusions, or behaviors. Her care plan identified a self-care deficit and potential for infection related to urinary incontinence, with directions to update the provider as needed. Beginning several days before hospitalization, progress notes documented new hallucinations and emotional distress, including the resident yelling and crying about her babies being murdered and being taken from her, and an IDT discussion noting hallucinations and behavioral changes. These symptoms were atypical for this resident and represented a change from her baseline. Over the following days, the resident developed and sustained fevers and other signs of systemic illness. Vital signs showed temperatures of 101.7°F with a pulse of 140 bpm, later rising to 103.2°F and remaining elevated around 101–100°F over multiple readings, along with low-grade fevers on subsequent days. Progress notes documented vomiting, visible shaking, feeling cold, episodes of incontinent diarrhea, reports of pain “everywhere,” crying, tearfulness, fatigue, and refusal of medications and meals. Despite these findings, nursing staff treated the resident only with scheduled acetaminophen and did not conduct a documented comprehensive nursing assessment or notify the provider when the fevers and other symptoms emerged and persisted. The IDT discussed the resident’s fevers, fatigue, medication refusals, and verbal behaviors but did not review the progress notes or vital signs in detail, and no provider notification occurred at that time. Staff interviews further confirmed that the change in condition was not appropriately recognized or escalated. One RN stated she had not identified anything out of the ordinary beyond weakness and a presumed low-grade influenza, and that staff believed the resident might be recovering when a single temperature reading was normal. Another RN acknowledged that the resident’s change in condition occurred over a weekend when the IDT was not present and that the team did not review the progress notes or vital signs during the subsequent IDT meeting. A different RN reported that she did not assess the resident after the IDT discussion because the resident was asleep and her temperature had decreased slightly, and she felt that the resident’s bipolar diagnosis and prior behaviors had masked the change and interfered with judgment. The facility’s own policy required licensed nurses to evaluate significant changes in condition, obtain vital signs, and notify the provider of abnormal vital signs, behavioral or neurological changes, and worsening pain, but this process was not followed for this resident, resulting in delayed recognition and treatment of sepsis and subsequent hospitalization. Ultimately, the resident was sent to the ED only after she appeared pale with a grey hue, had dark circles under her eyes, was shivering, reported generalized pain, and continued to feel unwell. In the ED, she was found to be ill-appearing and toxic-appearing, with a high fever, tachycardia, hypotension, low GFR, and a diagnosis of sepsis with acute renal failure, septic shock, acute kidney injury, ureteral obstruction, and UTI. The attending MD later stated that the facility had not contacted her when the resident developed a fever and that earlier evaluation could have avoided the septic shock. The NP who saw the resident in the ED described her as barely responsive, with low blood pressure requiring IV fluids and vasopressors, and indicated that while the ureteral stone itself was not avoidable, the sepsis and unnecessary pain could have been prevented if the resident had been sent to the ED sooner. These facts support the finding that the facility failed to provide appropriate treatment and care according to orders, the resident’s preferences and goals, and its own change-in-condition policy.

Removal Plan

  • Review policies and procedures related to change in condition and physician notification.
  • Review all residents for a potential change in condition.
  • Educate nursing staff on policies and procedures related to change of condition and resident monitoring, qualifying factors for a change of condition, assessment of resident symptoms without bias, and timely physician notification and treatment of resident symptoms.

Penalty

Fine: $154,460
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.

Resources

Below are regulatory guidelines relevant to this citation:

See other F0684 citations
Failure to Follow Physician Orders for Weekly Weights
D
F0684 F684: Provide appropriate treatment and care according to orders, resident’s preferences and goals.
Short Summary

A resident with severe dementia, psychiatric comorbidities, and protein-calorie malnutrition had a physician order for weekly weights, but the facility failed to consistently obtain and document these weights over several months. Although the resident appeared adequately nourished and was observed eating most of a meal, multiple ordered weekly weights were missing from the treatment records. Facility leadership, including the DON and ADON, were unaware that the weekly weight order had not been followed, despite policies requiring adherence to physician orders and documentation of weights in the EHR.

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 Follow Anticoagulation Orders and Accurate Medication Documentation
D
F0684 F684: Provide appropriate treatment and care according to orders, resident’s preferences and goals.
Short Summary

Two residents did not receive care in accordance with professional standards. One resident on warfarin for a valve replacement had invalid initial PT/INR labs, an order to hold warfarin pending results, and later dose changes, yet MAR entries showed warfarin was administered on days it should have been held, including when INRs were elevated and critically high, with no evidence the physician was contacted or that ordered follow-up INRs were drawn as prescribed. Another resident’s medication pass was observed where an LPN correctly administered six oral medications and held insulin for a blood sugar of 109, but later documented on the MAR that a polyethylene glycol 3350 dose had been given when it had not; after being questioned, the LPN retrieved the medication from the supply room and administered it after signing for it.

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 Follow Physician Orders for Insulin, Daily Weights, and BP-Related Medications
E
F0684 F684: Provide appropriate treatment and care according to orders, resident’s preferences and goals.
Short Summary

Surveyors found that staff failed to follow physician orders for several residents, including not documenting required physician notification and new insulin orders after a critically high blood glucose, not consistently obtaining or recording ordered daily weights, and administering antihypertensive and midodrine medications despite blood pressure readings outside ordered hold parameters. Documentation on the MAR and related records included unexplained "NA," "X," and blank entries for required weights, and cardiac and BP-related medications were given when systolic blood pressure was below or above specified thresholds, contrary to written orders and facility policy.

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 document assessments and follow medication parameters
E
F0684 F684: Provide appropriate treatment and care according to orders, resident’s preferences and goals.
Short Summary

The facility failed to document assessment and monitoring of a resident’s bruising and post-procedure condition, and failed to follow ordered medication hold parameters for two residents. One resident returned from an outpatient spinal injection with no nursing note or assessment, another had persistent bruising with no documentation, and two residents received Metoprolol and midodrine despite pulse or BP values outside ordered limits. A separate resident was observed with purple discolorations and a black scab, but the skin record did not reflect assessment or monitoring.

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 Assess and Document Changes in Condition
E
F0684 F684: Provide appropriate treatment and care according to orders, resident’s preferences and goals.
Short Summary

Failure to Assess and Document Changes in Condition: A resident with repeated falls, hypoxia, lethargy, and later hospital transfers had multiple episodes where assessments, vital signs, or follow-up documentation were missing or delayed. Another resident with COPD and impaired gas exchange was observed in respiratory distress without oxygen and was later transferred for respiratory failure, with no transfer documentation on the progress notes. A third resident with dementia and a history of falls had incomplete post-fall assessments and was later sent to the hospital after additional falls and pain. A fourth resident with a Foley catheter had cloudy, low, and absent output, pain, and family requests for transfer; the catheter was later found to have caused traumatic injury and hematuria.

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 Maintain Heel Offloading for Reopened DFU
D
F0684 F684: Provide appropriate treatment and care according to orders, resident’s preferences and goals.
Short Summary

Failure to maintain heel offloading for a resident with a reopened DFU. A resident with dementia and dependence for mobility had a left heel wound that had healed and then reopened; the wound care provider recommended heel floating and pressure relieving boots at all times, but observations showed the resident in bed with heels on the mattress and later reclined in a wheelchair with the heel resting on the footrest strap and no boots in place. Staff stated the resident had not refused the boots or heel floating, and the care plan was not updated after the wound reopened.

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.

Know what gets cited — and walk into your next survey with full visibility

We process and analyze inspection reports and Plans of Correction using AI to surface insights and trends — so you can improve care quality and stay ahead of compliance risk before your next survey.

Get ready for your next survey

See what surveyors are citing in your state and spot your risk areas before they do.

Monthly Citation Reports

Have you been cited for this tag?

Save hours drafting a compliant Plan of Correction — AI built on real approved POCs.

Plan of Correction Writer

Trusted data from CMS and state health departments

Every citation, penalty and Plan of Correction is sourced from public CMS records (latest release June 24, 2026) and official state health department websites — never guesswork.

Trusted by long-term care providers and associations.

Allegria Senior Living logo
FHCA logo
WeCare Centers logo
Care Rehab logo
An unhandled error has occurred. Reload 🗙