Failure to Notify Providers After Choking Event and Behavioral Escalation
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure timely and appropriate provider notification following significant changes in condition and behavioral incidents for two residents. For one resident with dementia, oropharyngeal dysphagia, cerebrovascular disease, and type II diabetes, care plans and orders required a mechanically altered diet, supervision with meals, and monitoring for signs of swallowing difficulty. During a lunch meal, this resident experienced a choking episode in the dining room that required the Heimlich maneuver. After the incident, the resident was assessed by the RN supervisor, who documented clear but diminished lung sounds, stable vital signs, and no further coughing, and the resident was kept at the nurse’s station for further evaluation. The RN supervisor reported that she texted the primary APRN to report the choking incident but did not receive a response. Despite the lack of response, she did not contact the on-call provider or the Medical Director. Instead, she independently entered orders for vital signs every four hours for three days, downgraded the resident’s diet, and initiated a speech screen, and only notified the APRN the following morning. The APRN later stated that she had been off duty at the time of the incident and that the RN should have contacted the on-call provider or Medical Director after not receiving a timely response, so that a chest x-ray could have been ordered the same day to evaluate for aspiration. Facility policy on change of condition required the nurse to notify the attending or on-call physician when there had been an accident or incident involving the resident or a significant change in physical, emotional, or mental condition. For another resident with metabolic encephalopathy, dementia, mild cognitive impairment, delusional disorder, anxiety disorder, and major depressive disorder, orders included PRN trazodone for anxiety, restlessness, or agitation. Nursing documentation showed that this resident had increased agitation and yelling, could not be redirected, and refused evening and PRN medications. The resident was found lying in another resident’s bed, and multiple attempts by staff to remove and reorient the resident were initially unsuccessful, with the resident remaining irate and difficult. The nurse documented the behaviors, the inability to administer medications, and the incident of the resident being in another resident’s bed, but there was no documentation that any provider was notified of the missed medications, refusal of PRN trazodone, or the escalating behaviors. Medication administration records confirmed that several scheduled evening medications and topical treatments were not administered that shift. Interviews with the RN, the psychiatric APRN, and the DON confirmed that no on-call provider or psychiatric APRN had been notified of the behavioral escalation, medication refusals, or the incident of the resident being in another resident’s bed. The DON stated that an on-call provider should have been notified for missed or refused medications, escalation in behaviors, and behavioral incidents. Facility policies on change of condition, charting and documentation, and medication refusal required provider notification for significant changes in condition and for repeated medication refusals, as well as accurate documentation of such notifications, which did not occur in these cases.
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