Failure to Provide Ordered Hydration and Correct Tube Flushes for Enteral Feeding
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to implement ordered hydration interventions and tube flushes for a resident receiving enteral nutrition via a gastrojejunal tube. The resident had moderate cognitive impairment and multiple diagnoses including stroke with hemiplegia, heart failure, kidney disease, diabetes, aphasia, malnutrition, and respiratory failure, and was NPO with tube feeding providing more than half of total caloric intake and at least 501 cc/day of fluid. The care plan and physician orders specified continuous Isosource 1.5 at 55 mL/hr, 30 mL water flushes before and after medications via the gastric port, additional free water flushes of 120 mL six times per day to meet hydration needs, and 30 mL water flushes through the jejunal port every four hours to prevent clogging. On one observed morning medication pass, an LPN paused the jejunal tube feeding, checked residual, flushed 30 cc of water into the gastric port, administered crushed medications via the gastric port, and flushed with another 30 cc of water, then restarted the feeding through the jejunal port. During this episode of care, the LPN did not provide the ordered 120 cc free water flush or the ordered 30 cc jejunal port flush, and no additional flushes were administered by any staff from 8:40 a.m. to 11:53 a.m. The medication and treatment administration record showed an order for a 60 cc flush with the day shift medication administration, a 120 cc flush, and a 30 cc jejunal port flush, but the LPN stated she believed the water used before and after medications and mixed with the medications counted toward the 120 cc flush and acknowledged she had not seen the part of the order requiring a 30 cc flush to the jejunal port every four hours. Later that day, another LPN flushed both the jejunal and gastric ports with 30 cc of water, then initially attempted to administer medications into the jejunal port until redirected by another LPN to use the gastric port, after which the gastric port was flushed with 30 cc of water and then 120 cc of water. Staff reviewed the orders and noted that the 120 cc flush six times per day did not specify which port to use, and documentation on the medication and treatment administration record showed variable flush amounts of 30 and 60 cc rather than the ordered 120 cc free water flushes. The registered dietician and nursing staff acknowledged that documentation reflected inconsistent flush volumes and that residents with tube feedings, such as this resident, were at increased risk of dehydration, and the DON stated that free water flushes were expected to be given as separate amounts from medication flushes and that medications and flushes were to be administered through the correct ports.
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