Failure to Use QAPI and Adverse Event Data to Control Unsafe Smoking and Oxygen Use
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to operate an effective QAPI process that used adverse event and safety data related to smoking and oxygen use to identify root causes and implement performance improvement activities. Despite a known pattern of residents retaining cigarettes and lighters on their person or in their rooms, including oxygen‑dependent residents, the facility did not ensure that smoking materials were controlled or that unsafe smoking behaviors were addressed. Staff and leadership were aware that multiple residents routinely violated the smoking policy, yet there was no effective system to analyze these events or modify care plans, supervision, or practices to prevent recurrence. One resident with COPD, chronic oxygen use, alcohol abuse, and documented noncompliance had a history of smoking in his room while on oxygen. Nursing notes showed he had been found smoking in his room on multiple prior occasions, including once while connected to his oxygen concentrator and another time with his oxygen turned off, and he refused to relinquish cigarettes and alcohol. Law enforcement had been called previously, and the DON and unit manager were notified of his behavior. His care plan addressed smoking and behavior but did not include oxygen safety interventions, and he continued to keep smoking materials on his person. On the night of the incident, he again smoked in his room while using oxygen, his nasal cannula ignited, and he sustained second‑degree facial burns and respiratory distress requiring emergent transfer to a hospital burn unit. Three other cognitively intact residents who smoked were also known to keep cigarettes and lighters on their person or in their rooms, including two who used oxygen. These residents reported that they routinely concealed smoking materials due to fear of theft, admitted to smoking in their rooms or bathrooms in violation of policy, and stated that staff rarely rounded in their rooms. Care plans and smoking evaluations documented them as safe smokers, often without supervision, and progress notes lacked documentation of noncompliance despite their own reports and staff observations. During surveyor observation, residents entered and exited the designated smoking area with their own cigarettes and lighters without surrendering them to staff, and oxygen‑in‑use/no‑smoking signs were posted outside their rooms. CNAs reported that most smokers refused to give up cigarettes and lighters and that they had repeatedly informed the unit manager, ADON, DON, and Administrator about residents smoking in rooms, including oxygen‑dependent residents, without effective follow‑up. Staff stated they did not attempt to confiscate smoking materials from certain residents due to prior aggression and that leadership did not change practices despite ongoing violations. Staff education on smoking and oxygen safety was described as limited to reading folders and signing sheets, with no formal in‑person training or verification of understanding. The facility had 45 smokers at the time of survey, and Immediate Jeopardy at a widespread level was identified related to the failure to use adverse event and safety information within QAPI to prevent recurrence of serious smoking‑ and oxygen‑related incidents.
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