Failure to Provide Nail Care, Implement Diet Orders, and Support Resident’s Right to Outside Medical Care
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide adequate and appropriate health care and services, including basic ADL support and implementation of physician diet orders, as well as failure to support a resident’s right to seek outside medical care. For one resident with quadriplegia and muscle wasting, surveyors observed fingernails approximately one to one and a half inches long. The resident reported he had been asking his assigned CNA for nail trimming for three days, but was repeatedly told to wait because the CNA was on break or it was change of shift. He stated his nails had last been cut by a family member about six weeks earlier, which the family member confirmed. Documentation of nail care tasks over the prior 30 days showed no nail care provided, with only one entry indicating resident refusal, and the facility could not produce a policy specific to ADLs or nail care. Staff interviews further showed inconsistent understanding and implementation of nail care. The CNA typically assigned to this resident stated nail care should be done every weekend or as needed and that staff should cut nails whenever a resident asks, but also reported staffing shortages that delayed nail care. She acknowledged the resident’s nails had last been cut by family about a month earlier and that nail care was considered a PRN task documented in the Kardex, although the DON and RN/Unit Manager were unsure where nail care completion was documented. The DON stated nail care was part of hygiene and infection control, should be done when requested, and that refusals should be documented, but she could not confirm documentation of prior refusals for this resident. The resident’s care plan identified ADL self-care deficits related to quadriplegia and the need for assistance with ADLs, but there was no evidence that requested nail care was provided or consistently documented. The same resident also had a physician order for double portions for all meals, which was not fully implemented. The medical record showed a house diet with specific restrictions and an order allowing double portions for all meals six times a day. The nutrition evaluation documented that the resident requested large entrée portions and that large portions were to be provided. However, observation of a lunch meal showed the tray ticket did not indicate large or double portions. The Food Service Manager reported the resident received large portions at breakfast only, and review of meal tickets confirmed that only breakfast was marked for large portions, while lunch and dinner were not. The FSM explained that diet orders entered in the EMR automatically transfer to the meal tracker system and that he could not adjust them; he stated the double-portion order had been categorized under “other” rather than dietary, so it did not appear correctly in the dietary system. The DON confirmed that the double-portion order had been miscategorized and that a dietary slip should have been written and handed to dietary staff but was not. A separate deficiency involved the facility’s failure to protect a resident’s right to seek medical services outside the facility, resulting in delayed emergent care. One resident, admitted with diagnoses including pancreatic disease, immune disorder, anemia, and muscle wasting, had undergone a distal pancreatectomy with partial gastrectomy and later had a surgical drain removed. According to the resident’s family member, the resident developed pain, bloating, vomiting, and diarrhea and requested to go to the hospital, but a nurse stated the in-house doctor would assess first. The family member reported that the resident was given nausea medication, continued to have symptoms through the night and into the next day, and that he repeatedly begged the nurse to send the resident out. He stated the resident had a pail of vomit at bedside and that he eventually called non-emergency police for a wellness check and advised the resident to call 911 herself, after which she was transported to the hospital. Progress notes documented that a call was placed to the MD regarding the resident’s condition, that later that evening the resident complained of pain and vomiting and the MD was notified, resulting in a change in pain medication frequency and an order for milk of magnesia. The note also indicated a request to obtain an order for IV fluids to prevent dehydration per family request, but stated the MD was called with no response. The following day, documentation showed the resident complained of stomach pain and insisted on going to the hospital, with vital signs recorded and the doctor paged. A later note recorded that paramedics were at the resident’s room and that the resident had called them to be taken to the hospital. Hospital records from that day showed the resident presented with worsening abdominal pain, swelling, systemic symptoms, leukocytosis with left shift, and CT findings of gastritis with inflammation near the prior drain site and postoperative fluid collections or possible pseudocysts. Staff interviews revealed gaps in assessment, monitoring, and support for the resident’s request to go to the ER. The RN/Unit Manager stated that when a resident has a change and wants to go to the ER, the nurse should assess, review vital signs, and determine if the issue can be treated in the facility, and acknowledged the resident was given pain and nausea medications and ultimately went to the hospital after calling 911 herself. She stated she did not know what happened at the time of transfer. CNAs recalled the resident as ambulatory and noted she was “getting sick towards the end” and “throwing up all the time,” but did not recall the exact timeline or whether she was sent out immediately. The DON stated she had heard police were involved for this resident but did not get details, and confirmed that if a resident wants to go to the hospital, the nurse should assess, notify the physician, document vitals and monitoring, and assist with transfer. She agreed that if it was not documented, it did not happen, and acknowledged the resident has a right to seek medical care and should be assisted in doing so.
Plan Of Correction
Corrective Action for Resident Affected: Nail care was provided to Resident#4. Identification of Other Residents at Risk: Director of Nursing or designee conducted a house-wide audit to identify residents in need of nail care. Any identified concerns were addressed, and nail care services were provided as indicated. Systemic Changes Implemented: The Director of Nursing or designee re-educated the Licensed nurses and certified nursing assistants on resident nail care requirements, including timely identification and reporting of nail care needs. Licensed Nurses and Certified Nursing Assistants were educated on documenting completion of nail care in the electronic health record and communicating unmet care needs to nursing supervision. Monitoring to Ensure Compliance: The Director of Nursing or designee will conduct weekly audits of residents requiring nail care needs are addressed and documented appropriately. Random audits will be completed weekly for four weeks, then monthly for two months. Findings will be reviewed during the facility's Quality Assurance Committee meetings, until substantial compliance is met.
Penalty
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