Failure to Obtain Physician Order and Accurately Assess Respiratory Status for Oxygen Therapy
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to obtain a physician’s order for supplemental oxygen and to accurately assess and document a resident’s respiratory status. The resident was admitted with diagnoses including acute pulmonary edema, atrial fibrillation, pulmonary hypertension, and edema, and the admission MDS indicated she was not receiving oxygen therapy and had intact cognition. Her admission assessment documented oxygen saturation of 95% on room air, shortness of breath, diminished right lung sounds, wheezes in the left lung, and a productive cough, yet there was no care plan focus or interventions related to respiratory care or supplemental oxygen. Early daily skilled assessments documented oxygen saturations of 95% on room air with no respiratory treatments, and one assessment incorrectly referenced COPD, a diagnosis the resident did not have. Subsequent daily skilled assessments showed documentation problems and a lack of timely physician involvement when the resident’s respiratory status changed. On multiple days, the same oxygen saturation reading from a prior date was copied forward, failing to provide accurate daily respiratory assessments. On one day, the resident’s oxygen saturation dropped to 94%, and an LPN initiated supplemental oxygen via nasal cannula as a respiratory therapy, but there was no documentation of physician notification or an order for oxygen. The following day, the resident’s oxygen saturation was 91% while on continuous oxygen at 2 L/min, and she had shortness of breath with exertion, at rest, and lying flat, yet there was still no documentation that the physician was notified of the need for oxygen or her worsening respiratory symptoms. Further documentation showed that on the evening when her cellulitis and right lower leg wound were reported to the medical practitioner, new wound care orders were obtained, but there was no corresponding notification about her respiratory decline or oxygen use. Progress notes indicated the resident was awake all night, repeatedly turning on the light, stating she did not know what she wanted, and yelling loudly. A weekly skilled review documented that she was oxygen dependent at 2 L/min. Later that evening, her daughter called 911, and the resident was transferred to the hospital, where EMS reported she did not normally wear oxygen, was on 3 L with oxygen saturation of 91–92%, and had oxygen saturation of 77% without oxygen. The hospital emergency department documented clinical impressions of acute hypoxic respiratory failure, acute on chronic congestive heart failure, and acute kidney injury. Facility policies on change in condition and oxygen administration required assessment, communication with the medical provider for new orders, and that oxygen be administered as ordered by a physician or as an emergency nursing measure until an order could be obtained, but the record lacked evidence that such orders were obtained for this resident’s supplemental oxygen use.
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