Failure to Follow Tracheostomy and Oxygen Therapy Standards for Two Residents
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide respiratory care and services in accordance with professional standards of practice for residents with tracheostomies and oxygen therapy. For one resident with chronic respiratory failure with hypoxia, dementia, dysphagia, aphagia, and tracheostomy status, surveyors observed the resident in bed with a trach mask delivering 2 L/min of oxygen at 28% humidity, despite there being no physician order for humidified oxygen via trach mask in the medical record. The trach mask contained red specks appearing to be dried blood, and large amounts of tannish white secretions were leaking from the trach mask onto a wash cloth. Free water was observed in the lower portion of the oxygen tubing prior to the water collection bag, which was placed on its side in the bed, and there was condensation on the compressor and water on the table below the equipment. Oxygen and trach tubing were not dated as required by the resident’s orders. Further review of this resident’s records showed multiple ordered tracheostomy-related treatments were not documented as completed. The TAR showed no entries for ordered daily trach tie changes on several day shifts, no documentation of as-needed trach suctioning to clear the airway, and missed documentation of tracheostomy site dressing changes on specified day shifts. The care plan for this resident included a focus on risk for respiratory complications related to tracheostomy and an intervention to administer oxygen as ordered, but staff were unable to locate a corresponding oxygen order. Staff interviews confirmed that oxygen therapy requires a physician order, that trach care and suctioning should be documented in the medical record, and that emergency trach supplies, including an extra trach tube and artificial manual breathing unit, were expected to be kept at the bedside. However, staff could not locate a replacement trach tube in the resident’s room. A second resident with acute and chronic respiratory failure with hypoxia, anoxic brain damage, COPD, dysphagia, tracheostomy status, and dependence on supplemental oxygen was observed receiving 5 L/min of oxygen at 28% humidity via trach mask. The oxygen and trach tubing were not dated, and a bag at the bedside was dated more than two weeks earlier than the observation date. Later observation showed clear to white drainage at the trach site. The TAR contained an order to change and date oxygen tubing and bag cover weekly, and an order for continuous oxygen at 5 L/min via trach mask with 28% humidified air, but there were no orders or treatments documented for trach tubing, trach care, suctioning, or emergency trach supplies at the bedside. Staff confirmed that trach care and suction should be provided every shift and as needed, that tubing should be dated when changed, and that emergency trach supplies, including a trach tube, should be at the bedside, yet the replacement trach tube was not readily accessible and was reported to be kept in central supply. The facility’s tracheostomy care policy required trach care to be performed only with a physician order and in accordance with the resident’s individualized plan of care, which was not consistently followed for these residents.
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