Incomplete and Inconsistent Clinical Documentation for Change in Condition and Skin Injuries
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to maintain complete, accurate, and consistent clinical records for two residents, affecting the reliability of the medical record and continuity of care. For the first resident, who had multiple serious diagnoses including metabolic encephalopathy, dysphagia, diabetes, sepsis, congestive heart failure, acute kidney failure, and adult failure to thrive, staff accounts of a code blue event were inconsistent and incompletely documented. An LPN working the night shift reported being told that an unidentified CNA found the resident unresponsive, that this was reported to the second-shift Nurse Supervisor, and that EMS transported the resident to the hospital. An RN who participated in the code stated she heard the assigned nurse calling for help, found the resident unresponsive with the assigned nurse performing CPR, and reported that only she and the assigned nurse were in the room while the Nurse Supervisor made calls to 911, the family, and the physician. The former DON later reported being informed of the code blue the next morning and recounted a different version from the assigned nurse, stating the nurse had gone in to check the resident’s blood sugar, found the resident with Cheyne-Stokes breathing, stayed at the bedside until the resident became unresponsive, and then called a code blue. In this account, the second-shift Nurse Supervisor was the only other person in the room during CPR, and the assigned nurse made the calls to 911, the physician, and the family. Review of the resident’s medical record showed a change in condition note indicating the resident was found unresponsive and had a cardiac arrest, that CPR was initiated, 911 was called, and a transfer to the emergency room was ordered. However, the documentation lacked a specific time of the event, did not identify who found the resident, and did not describe the resident’s condition prior to becoming unresponsive, contrary to the facility’s documentation policy requiring a complete and accurate representation of the resident’s experiences. For the second resident, admitted for respite care with a history including stroke with right-sided deficit, right heel pressure ulcer, coronary artery disease, and a pacemaker, the facility failed to document an incident and resulting skin impairments. The resident’s daughter reported that when she arrived to pick him up at discharge, she observed a bandage on his leg and was told by the resident that he had gone on an outing where unsecured wheelchairs fell on the way back, scratching his arm and causing a gash in his leg; she stated no one from the facility informed her of these new wounds or the incident. CNA documentation showed the resident refused group activities on two specific dates and contained skin observation entries noting a “not new” skin tear to the arm on one date and a “not new” skin tear to the leg on another, with no skin observation documentation for several intervening days. The treatment administration record and physician orders contained no wound identification or treatment orders for the relevant period, and progress notes and admission assessments documented skin as fair, warm, and dry, with no skin issues noted. There was no documentation of a change in condition, no nursing assessment of the reported wounds, no provider or family notification, and the discharge summary stated there were no skin issues at discharge, despite the CNA skin observation entries and the daughter’s report of a leg wound with a bandage.
Penalty
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