Failure to Develop and Update Comprehensive Care Plan for High-Risk Resident
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to develop and maintain a comprehensive, person-centered care plan with measurable objectives and timeframes for a resident with multiple medical conditions and identified risk factors. The resident was admitted with acute on chronic diastolic congestive heart failure, acute and chronic respiratory failure with hypoxia, pulmonary edema, muscle weakness, gait and mobility abnormalities, cognitive communication deficit, and dementia, and was placed on a sodium-restricted diet. The admission MDS identified moderately impaired cognition, dependence on staff for toileting, bathing, transfers, position changes, and wheelchair mobility, frequent bowel and bladder incontinence, risk for pressure ulcers/injuries, use of pressure-reducing devices, and use of anticoagulant and diuretic medications. These assessments triggered care areas including nutritional status, pressure ulcer, cognitive loss/dementia, ADL functional/rehabilitation potential, and urinary incontinence. Despite these findings, the resident’s care plan did not accurately reflect the resident’s functional and skin status or the therapy recommendations. The care plan dated 12/2 identified a self-care deficit related to ADLs and activity intolerance and directed an assist of one for bed mobility and transfers, and documented the resident as non-ambulatory. These interventions were carried over from a previous admission and did not incorporate the physical and occupational therapy evaluations completed on 11/29, which documented that the resident required an assist of two for bed mobility, sit-to-lying, lying-to-sitting, and sit-to-stand, and that transfers were not attempted due to medical condition. Therapy notes further indicated the resident required a mechanical Hoyer lift for transfers, had poor activity tolerance, fatigue, shortness of breath with activity, and decreased O2 saturation, yet the care plan and nurse aide care card continued to direct an assist of one and did not include the Hoyer lift. The care plan was not updated to reflect subsequent therapy documentation that the resident required an assist of two for safety during transfers and had a new level of ability with fatigue and shortness of breath. The facility also failed to accurately assess and care plan the resident’s skin integrity and pressure injury risk. On admission, nursing notes documented multiple skin issues, including a right shin abrasion, red/blanchable buttocks, bruising, edema to bilateral lower extremities, and later a right lower leg wound treated by a wound specialist. Braden Scale assessments completed by facility staff scored the resident at 16 and 17 (mild risk), indicating no sensory impairment, occasional moisture, chairfast status with frequent slight position changes, and adequate or probably inadequate nutrition. However, based on the admission assessment, therapy assessments, and nursing notes, the surveyor’s Braden scoring indicated the resident should have been classified as high risk, with very limited sensory perception, bedfast activity, very limited mobility, probably inadequate nutrition, and friction/shear as a problem. The care plan for “risk for potential impairment to skin integrity” remained generalized, did not identify the resident’s open wounds, did not incorporate the wound physician’s specific treatment orders, and was not revised when new coccyx moisture-associated skin damage and a stage 3 coccyx pressure wound were identified. Interviews with MDS and nursing leadership confirmed that open areas and wound MD involvement should have been reflected in the care plan, that Braden assessments were not accurate, and that interventions in the care plan did not align with assessments or therapy recommendations, contrary to facility policies requiring individualized, measurable, and updated care plans based on comprehensive assessment and risk factors.
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