Failure to Complete STAT Diagnostics and Notify Provider of Critical Labs After Change in Condition
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure a STAT chest x-ray was completed as ordered and to promptly notify a provider of critical and abnormal laboratory values for a resident who experienced a change in condition. The resident had a medical history including atherosclerotic heart disease, paroxysmal atrial fibrillation, encephalopathy, vascular dementia, traumatic subdural hemorrhage, hypertension, and cognitive communication deficit, and had a BIMS score of 11 indicating moderate cognitive impairment. On the day of the change in condition, a nurse practitioner (NP) was requested to evaluate the resident for acute respiratory distress and documented that the resident had difficulty breathing with use of accessory muscles, lung crackles, and oxygen saturation of 93–96% on room air. In response, the NP ordered a STAT chest x-ray and STAT laboratory tests, including a CMP, magnesium level, and CBC with differential, to rule out pneumonia and assess for other possible underlying causes. Physician orders were entered for the STAT chest x-ray and STAT laboratory tests within minutes of the NP’s assessment. The medical record, however, contained no evidence that the STAT chest x-ray ordered that day was ever completed. The x-ray vendor later reported receiving an x-ray order on a subsequent day and stated that when the technician arrived, the resident had already been sent to the emergency room, and that no STAT chest x-ray order had been received on the earlier date when the NP initially ordered it. The DON stated there was no written policy providing guidance on STAT orders, but there was a mutual expectation that STAT orders should be completed within four hours, and the x-ray vendor representative stated the vendor had eight hours to complete a STAT x-ray. The laboratory vendor reported receiving the STAT lab order late that morning, collecting the blood specimen in the afternoon, and communicating the critical and abnormal results to the Evening Nursing Supervisor later that evening. The lab results showed a critically high sodium level of 161 mmol/L, elevated BUN of 55 mg/dL, elevated magnesium of 2.9 mg/dL, and a markedly elevated WBC count of 29.68 x10^3/µL. The Evening Nursing Supervisor recalled receiving a call about the critical and abnormal lab values but stated she did not think she was the person the lab had called. The NP stated she was not aware the chest x-ray had not been completed and that the facility should have contacted the provider when the critical lab results were received; she further stated that had she been notified that evening, she would have sent the resident to the hospital. The DON confirmed that nurses were responsible for following up on STAT orders, notifying the provider if labs or x-rays were not completed, and reporting all critical lab values immediately, and acknowledged she was unaware that the resident’s critical lab results had not been reported to the provider. The Medical Director and Administrator both stated their expectation that providers be notified immediately of any change in condition, all critical lab results, or if an order could not be carried out. The resident was ultimately transferred to the hospital the following day after the NP reviewed the lab results and clinical status and obtained an order for transfer due to critical lab values and elevated WBC count. Upon arrival at the hospital, the resident was noted by EMS and emergency department documentation to be hypotensive with agonal respirations. EMS initiated intraosseous access, fluids, and bagging, and the resident lost pulses, prompting CPR initiation. The emergency department record indicated the resident remained pulseless and in asystole despite multiple rounds of CPR and medications, and resuscitation efforts were terminated with a recorded time of death. The surveyors determined that the facility’s noncompliance with requirements for quality of care, specifically the failure to complete the ordered STAT chest x-ray and to promptly notify the provider of critical and abnormal laboratory values, caused or was likely to cause serious injury, harm, impairment, or death, and cited the facility at F684, Quality of Care, at an Immediate Jeopardy level.
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