Failure to Provide Adequate Pressure Ulcer Prevention and Treatment for a Resident
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to promote healing of existing pressure ulcers and to prevent the development of new pressure ulcers for one resident. The resident was admitted with multiple medical conditions including circulatory system aftercare, muscle disorder, gait difficulty, abnormal posture, cognitive and communication deficits, dysphagia, atherosclerotic heart disease, hypertension, GERD, IBS, overactive bladder, constipation, PVD, pneumonia, urinary retention, osteoarthritis, mild cognitive impairment, hyperlipidemia, and osteoporosis. An MDS with an ARD of 03/26/2026 documented moderate cognitive impairment (BIMS 9/15) and one unstageable pressure ulcer on admission. On observation, the resident reported having a coccyx wound and another wound on the left buttock, describing severe pain rated 9/10, while lying on a bed with an air mattress pump that appeared operational. Record review showed that on 03/22/2026 the sacral wound was documented as a stage 2 pressure ulcer measuring 0.7 cm by 0.5 cm by 0.2 cm with 100% epithelial tissue. By 03/23/2026, the same area was documented as an unstageable pressure ulcer measuring 2.0 cm by 1.3 cm by 0.2 cm with 60% slough. By 03/30/2026, the unstageable sacral ulcer had enlarged to 6.8 cm by 5.0 cm by 0.2 cm (34.00 cm²) with 60% slough, and by 04/13/2026 it had further progressed to 8.5 cm by 8.5 cm by 0.10 cm (72.25 cm²), with no documented evaluation of intact skin or slough. A separate dorsal sacral wound, documented as facility-acquired, was first recorded on 04/07/2026 as an unstageable pressure ulcer measuring 2.8 cm by 2.2 cm by 0.10 cm with 90% non-granulation tissue and 10% slough, and by 04/13/2026 had increased to 4.2 cm by 2.7 cm by 0.10 cm (11.24 cm²). A wound PA note on 04/13/2026 described the dorsal sacral wound bed as having 100% slough with no eschar or epithelization. The facility’s care planning and orders did not reflect timely or adequate interventions for these wounds. A care plan problem for potential skin breakdown related to mobility deficits, initiated 03/20/2026, included use of an alternating air mattress and assistance with turning and repositioning, but the DON later confirmed that an order for the alternating pressure mattress was not written until 04/07/2026, despite it being listed on the care plan since 03/20/2026. A new care plan problem for actual skin breakdown related to the coccyx, initiated 04/20/2026, contained no interventions to treat or prevent further decline of the wound or prevent additional breakdown. Another problem statement for a pressure ulcer to the sacrum, initiated 04/07/2026, did not include new interventions after the development of the new wound. A Pressure Injury Unavoidable Evaluation dated 04/07/2026 listed risk factors such as immobility, chronic bowel incontinence, chronic heart disease, and weight loss/poor nutrition, but the weight loss section was not completed and the physician signature line was blank. Physician orders for coccyx wound care were present from 03/21/2026 through 04/15/2026, with changes in cleansing solutions and dressings, but no order was found for treatment of the lateral/dorsal sacral wound when it was identified on 04/06/2026. The DON was unable to provide documentation of interventions in place prior to the development of the dorsal sacral wound and could not provide an order for treatment of that wound at the time it developed. On review of the medical record on 04/21/2026, no active wound treatment orders were found for the resident’s wounds, and the April TAR did not show that any treatment had been completed for the dorsal sacral wound. During observed wound care on 04/21/2026, the dressing removed from the buttock was dated 04/20/2026 and covered both the coccyx and left dorsal sacral wounds; both wounds appeared unstageable with eschar present, and the wound nurse assessed approximately 65% eschar in the dorsal sacral wound and 85% eschar in the coccyx wound, with the coccyx wound measuring 10.0 cm by 9.0 cm by 1 cm. The resident continued to report severe pain associated with these wounds.
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