Failure to Follow Through on Custom Wheelchair Order and Accommodate Resident Mobility Needs
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to reasonably accommodate a resident’s need for a customized wheelchair despite an active physician order and documented discomfort with the current wheelchair. The resident had a history of hemiplegia and hemiparesis following a stroke, muscle wasting, COPD, chronic pain, and dependence on staff for transfers and most ADLs. The care plan identified hemiplegia/hemiparesis, pain management needs, dependence for mobility and repositioning, and the use of a wheelchair, with an order dated 01/22/26 for a custom wheelchair for proper positioning related to right hemiplegia and hemiparesis. Nursing documentation noted the resident reported back pain from lying on his/her back most of the time and that using the wheelchair at times helped relieve some pain. During interview, the resident stated the current wheelchair was uncomfortable, that he/she could only tolerate sitting in it for about 20 minutes before needing to return to bed due to pain, and that staff had largely stopped asking him/her to go to the dining room after multiple refusals. The facility’s own Durable Medical Equipment policy outlined detailed requirements and processes for obtaining custom wheelchairs, including physician face-to-face examinations, therapy evaluations, ATP involvement, prior authorization, and documentation standards. However, staff interviews revealed confusion and lack of clarity about the internal process for ordering and following through on a custom wheelchair, particularly for residents not currently on therapy. The physical therapy director reported that a custom wheelchair request originated around June 2025 during a care plan meeting, that he/she completed at least one evaluation and a wheelchair form, and placed the form in a physician’s folder for signature. He/she stated that for several weeks he/she moved the form to the front of the physician’s folder, later found the papers missing, and assumed the form had moved forward in the process. When a nurse practitioner later asked for the form and reported not having seen it, the therapy director completed another form and again placed it in the same physician’s folder. The therapy director stated he/she does not usually receive signed forms back and did not know whose responsibility it was to complete the process after the physician signed. Multiple staff members, including the DON, social services director, business office manager, and administrator, gave inconsistent or incomplete descriptions of who was responsible for ordering and tracking the custom wheelchair. The DON stated he/she did not know the facility’s process for assisting residents with obtaining a customized wheelchair, believed therapy “headed that up,” and thought social services might be involved but was unsure. The social services director, who had been in the role for three weeks, reported not knowing the process for ordering a custom wheelchair, not being aware of any medical equipment ordering policy, and deferring questions to the administrator or business office manager. The business office manager stated that wheelchair orders go through therapy and that he/she had no paperwork regarding the custom wheelchair order dated 01/22/26. The administrator stated that the DON should be following and reviewing physician orders to ensure they are carried out, acknowledged there was an active order for a custom wheelchair in the chart, and was unsure if anyone was working on obtaining it or what had happened after therapy contacted the equipment company. The medical director confirmed signing an order for a custom wheelchair in January 2026 and said he/she expected the wheelchair to be in place by now, but there was no documentation in the record of his/her follow-up call to a wheelchair company. Overall, there was no documentation in the resident’s record or in facility files showing that the custom wheelchair order had been processed, tracked, or completed, resulting in the resident continuing to use an uncomfortable standard wheelchair and remaining largely bedbound despite an order and policy framework intended to support provision of a custom wheelchair. Additional interviews further illustrated the lack of follow-through and coordination. The physical therapy director reported that the resident had at times expressed liking the existing wheelchair to him/her while telling family it was uncomfortable, that the resident had refused trying a larger facility wheelchair offered as a trial, and that the resident had long periods of remaining in bed, including about eight months when he/she did not get out of bed. The therapy director also stated that he/she recalled telling the family they would need to pick a wheelchair company but never heard back, and that he/she had no paperwork in the therapy file related to the custom wheelchair process. Nursing staff, including an RN and an LPN, reported not being aware of the resident requesting or needing a new wheelchair and noted that the resident rarely got out of bed, typically only for showers, with transfers requiring a Hoyer lift and two staff. The DON stated that therapy had indicated they could not get the resident out of bed and therefore saw no need for a new wheelchair, and also stated that the resident did not qualify to have the wheelchair paid for, while acknowledging that he/she would expect the January 22 order to be resolved or at least have documented progress. Collectively, these actions and inactions show that despite an identified need, an active physician order, and a facility policy describing the process for obtaining custom wheelchairs, the facility did not ensure that the resident’s custom wheelchair was ordered, tracked, and obtained, and did not reasonably accommodate the resident’s need for appropriate seating and mobility. Staff interviews also showed that the facility lacked a clear, consistently understood process for ordering and tracking custom wheelchairs. The physical therapy director described a general sequence of identifying need, performing a wheelchair evaluation, contacting a medical supply company, completing forms, and placing them in a physician’s folder, but could not identify who was responsible for subsequent steps after physician signature. The DON believed therapy initiated the process and that the family would select the DME company, while the administrator stated that the social worker had no role and that equipment would be ordered by maintenance, the DON, and/or the administrator. The social services director believed maintenance ordered beds and similar equipment and that any resident equipment needs would be cleared through the administrator. No one could produce a policy specific to physician orders or a documented workflow for custom wheelchair procurement. This lack of defined responsibility and documentation resulted in the resident’s custom wheelchair order remaining unresolved for an extended period, despite the resident’s ongoing discomfort and limited tolerance for the existing wheelchair.
Penalty
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