Failure to Follow Care Plans, Monitor Changes in Condition, and Implement Toileting and Wound Care Orders
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide treatment and care in accordance with professional standards of practice and person-centered care plans for three residents. For one resident with a history of stroke, paralysis, aphasia, dysphagia, dementia, seizures, and incontinence, staff did not complete appropriate ongoing assessments and monitoring after a significant change in condition. On the night of the change in condition, the RN documented that the resident was lethargic and unable to respond, with an SBAR note indicating increased stimulation (sternal rub) and stable vital signs at that time. Later documentation showed that IV fluids ordered by the provider could not be started due to difficulty inserting an IV line, and that the resident’s oxygen saturation dropped to 75% on 2 L O2, improving only slightly with increased oxygen. The Unit Manager later confirmed that when he assessed the resident that morning, the heart rate was below 60 and oxygen saturation was 75% on 20 L, and that there were no further neurological assessments or documentation of ongoing monitoring of vital signs or oxygen saturation after the initial change in condition. Another deficiency involved a resident with CHF, alcohol-induced dementia and psychotic disorder, MRSA carrier status, and behavioral disturbances, including voiding in inappropriate places. Surveyors repeatedly observed large puddles of urine on the floor of this resident’s room on multiple days, with a strong urine odor and urine under the bed and in the pathway to the exit. Nursing notes documented multiple episodes of the resident urinating on the floor throughout the month, including descriptions of the floor being urine soaked and housekeeping being called to clean. The resident’s care plan identified self-care deficits in toileting, behavioral issues including voiding in the trash can and on the bedroom floor, and goals to decrease behavioral episodes, with interventions such as offering toileting assistance after waking and meals, ensuring access to a urinal, providing reminders, and assisting with urinal use and emptying. However, behavior monitoring documentation did not reflect these urine-on-floor episodes, and behavior codes for other behaviors were not used. Bladder continence documentation lacked entries on days when urine was observed on the floor, and the 30-day look-back characterized the resident as sometimes continent and sometimes incontinent. Further review of this resident’s bowel and bladder screeners showed that he repeatedly met criteria as a candidate for scheduled toileting (timed voiding), yet the screener indicated that no toileting program was in use. The facility’s bowel and bladder program policy required incontinent residents to be scheduled for elimination tracking and placed on a continence plan, with individualized programs such as scheduled voiding, prompted voiding, or bladder retraining based on cognitive and functional status. Despite this, the MDS documented that no trial of a toileting program had been attempted since urinary incontinence was noted, and the Unit Manager confirmed there had been no evaluation of voiding patterns and no scheduled toileting or bladder program in place. Staff interviews indicated that CNAs documented such episodes simply as incontinence and were not aware of any specific plan to address the resident’s urinating on the floor, while housekeeping reported that the resident urinated on the floor every morning and that she cleaned it at the start of her shift and monitored for further episodes. A third deficiency involved a resident on hospice with a history of acute respiratory failure, muscle weakness, chronic pain syndrome, muscle spasm of the back, major depressive disorder, and Type 2 diabetes with chronic kidney disease, who required assistance with ADLs and had open lesions on the left shin. The physician’s order directed that the left shin be cleansed with normal saline, patted dry, and covered with hydrogel gauze, a non-adherent dressing, and kerlix, secured with tape, every other day and as needed for open lesions. During observation, the resident was seen in bed with a blood-soaked dressing on the left shin and foot, and she reported having open sores due to psoriasis that she picked at. On subsequent observations on two different days, the resident was in bed without any dressing on the left leg. Review of the Treatment Administration Record showed that dressing changes were documented as completed every other day, but there was no documentation on the TAR or in nursing progress notes explaining the absence of dressings on the days observed. The treatment nurse confirmed the wound care order and the documented schedule but could not explain why the resident did not have a dressing on the past two days. Collectively, these findings show that the facility did not ensure that residents received care and treatment according to physician orders, professional standards, and individualized care plans. For the first resident, there was a lack of ongoing neurological and vital sign monitoring after a documented change in condition and difficulty initiating ordered IV therapy. For the second resident, there was a pattern of unaddressed and incompletely documented urinary incontinence behaviors, absence of a toileting program despite policy and assessment findings indicating candidacy, and incomplete behavior and continence documentation. For the third resident, wound care orders for regular and as-needed dressing changes were not consistently implemented or documented in a manner consistent with observed care, as the resident was repeatedly observed without the ordered dressing in place.
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