Failure to Update Care Plans for One-to-One Feeding and Behavioral/Refusal Needs
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to develop and revise resident care plans to reflect physician orders and identified care needs for two residents. For one resident with dementia, oropharyngeal dysphagia, cerebrovascular disease, and type II diabetes, the quarterly MDS showed severely impaired cognition and a need for supervision with eating and dependence for oral care, bed mobility, and transfers, with a mechanically altered diet. The existing Resident Care Plan (RCP) identified impaired cognition and a potential swallowing problem, with interventions such as supervision with meals, following the prescribed diet, upright positioning, slow eating, thorough chewing, and monitoring for signs of dysphagia and respiratory issues. Despite these identified needs, after a choking incident in the dining room that required the Heimlich maneuver, the RCP and Kardex were not updated to reflect new physician and therapy orders for one-to-one feeding assistance. Following the choking episode, documentation showed that the resident’s diet was downgraded and that a provider ordered one-to-one feeding for meals, with an additional order specifying occupational therapy ADL recommendations for 1:1 feeding. A speech evaluation identified that the resident was unable to self-feed due to cognition, required rate modification, had decreased safety awareness, and required one-to-one feeding assistance, with a recommendation for a minced and moist diet excluding certain foods. However, subsequent observation of the lunch meal showed the resident feeding independently, with a meal ticket that did not indicate the need for one-to-one feeding assistance. The Kardex still showed a mechanically altered diet with supervision for eating, not one-to-one feeding, and the RCP had not been revised to include the one-to-one feeding order. Interviews with the DON and MDS nurse confirmed that the care plan and Kardex should have been updated immediately when the change in supervision needs was identified and that this had not occurred. For a second resident with metabolic encephalopathy, dementia, mild cognitive impairment, delusional disorder, anxiety disorder, and major depressive disorder, the record documented a pattern of agitation, yelling, paranoia, wandering, and repeated refusals of medications, vital signs, lab work, weights, body evaluations, and topical treatments. Nursing notes and order administration entries over multiple days described increased agitation, yelling, difficulty with redirection, refusal of evening and as-needed medications, refusal to go to the resident’s room, and refusal of vital signs and lab work. Additional notes described the resident as alert but confused, paranoid, talking loudly to self, tearful, anxious, and sometimes taking medications only with significant encouragement. The pattern culminated in an incident where the resident, after becoming belligerent about not receiving breakfast, was found in a roommate’s area holding a brush, with the roommate observed to have lotion in the hair and visible bruising and a red mark to the face and hand. Review of the clinical record showed there was no RCP addressing behaviors or refusals of care prior to this incident, and the DON stated that nursing or the IDT should have identified the pattern of behaviors and refusals from admission and initiated care plans and interventions as soon as the behaviors were identified. Facility policies on Care Plans and Resident Profiles directed that RCPs can be revised at any time on an interim basis, must include physical, cognitive, and psychosocial problems, and must address residents’ needs on an individualized basis, and that nursing staff must be aware of all current care needs by checking the resident profile at the start of and throughout each shift. Despite these policies, the RCP and Kardex for the first resident were not revised to reflect the physician-ordered one-to-one feeding assistance after the choking event, and no behavior or refusal-of-care RCP was developed for the second resident despite ongoing documented agitation, paranoia, yelling, wandering, and repeated refusals of care. Requested facility policies for staff supervision for meals in the dining room and for therapy recommendations were not available.
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