Improper Management of Temporary Urinary Catheter G-Tube Leading to Malposition and Hospitalization
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to properly monitor and manage a temporary urinary catheter used as a gastrostomy tube (g-tube), lack of clear policies and procedures for this type of device, and inadequate staff training and competency, which led to a resident’s hospitalization. The resident had a history of major cerebrovascular accident with right-sided hemiparesis and aphasia and required tube feeding for dysphagia. After the resident’s original surgically placed g-tube was pulled out, the hospital replaced it with a 16 French coude Foley catheter to be used as a temporary feeding tube and provided written instructions to check the external guide mark at the skin, ensure it did not change, and secure the tube with tape or an anchoring device. The hospital also instructed that the resident follow up with surgery within 1–2 weeks for placement of a longer-term g-tube. Upon return to the facility, the DON later replaced the 16 French urinary catheter g-tube with a 20 French urinary catheter at the request of the resident’s family, without contacting the physician and without any facility policy or procedure governing such a replacement. The DON stated she relied on experience from a previous employer, had no certification, and did not mark or measure the external length of the tube at the skin level, only recalling that approximately 12 inches of tubing extended from the abdomen. She reported that staff checked tube placement by aspirating gastric contents before medications, flushes, or feedings, but did not monitor tube placement by checking external markings or measurements. The facility’s physician orders directed staff to check tube placement before formula, medications, and flushing, but did not include orders to check external tube measurements. The facility’s feeding tube policies referenced use of coude urinary catheters under extenuating circumstances and stated that licensed nurses would monitor that the tube was in the right location and that the enteral retention device would be checked daily, but did not define how to verify correct location or specify conditions and personnel for tube replacement in this situation. Multiple nurses, including LPNs, reported they had no education or training on urinary catheters used as g-tubes and described checking placement only by aspirating gastric contents or listening to the stomach, with no knowledge of how to determine if the tube had migrated in or out. One LPN stated that the day the resident was sent to the hospital, it was the first time she had seen a urinary catheter used as a g-tube, she had received no education, and she observed the catheter flush against the resident’s stomach with tube feeding leaking over the abdomen and bed, and no tape or anchoring device in place. Progress notes documented continuous leaking from the g-tube with most of the feeding coming out around the stoma, unsuccessful attempts to control leakage by adding fluid to the balloon, and subsequent transfer to the emergency room. Hospital records showed that the urinary catheter used as a g-tube had migrated into the proximal jejunum, with only the tip visible at the skin, causing partial small bowel obstruction, substantial leakage from the stoma, and pancreatitis. The resident’s care plan noted tube feeding for dysphagia and an emergency room transfer for g-tube malfunction but was not updated with specific interventions for the urinary catheter g-tube. The facility administrator and DON confirmed there were no specific policies or staff in-services on urinary catheter g-tubes or their replacement, and the physician stated that nurses should monitor external g-tube placement and that such tube changes are typically done in the emergency room by a physician.
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