Failure to Align Wound Care Orders With Wound Specialist’s Plan of Care
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide wound care in accordance with the wound care specialist’s recommendations and to correctly enter and follow wound treatment orders for a resident with cellulitis and gangrene. The resident was cognitively intact, required moderate assistance for transfers, and had impaired skin integrity with bilateral lower leg cellulitis and a necrotic left great toe with dry gangrene. The facility’s wound care policy required specific treatment orders and care plans that reflected the current wound status and appropriate goals and approaches. The care plan and physician orders were supposed to be based on the wound care FNP’s weekly assessments and written recommendations. The wound care FNP documented multiple progress notes specifying that the left great toe wound should be cleansed with hypochlorous acid without rinsing, painted with Betadine, and covered with a calcium alginate dressing cut to fit inside the wound edges, with dressing changes to occur daily and as needed. These recommendations were documented on several dates, including 12/12/25, 12/19/25, and 01/02/26, and the FNP indicated that all orders would remain in effect until discontinued, revised, or replaced. Despite this, the facility’s Physician Order Sheets did not consistently reflect these directions. On 12/15/25, the order for the left big toe was entered as cleansing with hypochlorous acid and painting with Betadine with treatment once every other day, and it did not include the calcium alginate dressing as ordered by the FNP. On 12/19/25, the order was updated to include calcium alginate but specified application to the crevice between the toe and foot once every other day, rather than daily and cut to fit inside the wound as directed by the FNP. The January 2026 Physician Order Sheet still did not reflect the correct daily frequency or the instruction to cut the calcium alginate to fit inside the wound, even after the FNP’s 01/02/26 note again ordered daily dressing changes with calcium alginate cut to fit in the wound base. Nursing staff interviews showed that LPNs believed they were to follow the wound care FNP’s recommendations and that a nurse would enter those recommendations into the computer for the physician to sign, but they were unaware that the treatment frequency had been decreased to every other day and that this change did not match the FNP’s recommendations. The FNP stated that he/she expected staff to follow his/her and the physician’s wound care orders, did not order a decrease in treatment frequency, and was unaware that the facility had reduced the frequency. The physician and DON both stated they expected nurses to enter and follow orders that matched the FNP’s recommendations, but they did not know the entered orders differed from those recommendations. This series of incorrect order entries and failure to align the POS with the wound care specialist’s documented plan of care led to the facility not providing wound care per standards of practice and per the wound care specialist’s certified plan of care for the resident’s left great toe wound. The resident’s care plan updates reflected some of the FNP’s clarifications, such as painting the big toe with Betadine and placing calcium alginate around the toe in the crevice between the toe and healthy tissue, and noted that wound care to the left leg should be done every other day and as needed. However, these care plan entries still did not fully match the FNP’s written orders for daily dressing changes and for calcium alginate to be cut to fit inside the wound edges. Staff interviews confirmed that the process relied on nurses to transcribe the FNP’s recommendations into physician orders, and that the DON and Administrator expected those orders to match the FNP’s notes. The discrepancy between the FNP’s documented orders and the actual physician orders entered and followed by staff, particularly regarding the frequency of treatment and the method of applying calcium alginate, constituted the failure to provide care according to standards of practice and the wound care specialist’s recommendations for this resident. The deficiency is further supported by the fact that multiple staff members, including LPNs, an RN, the FNP, the physician, the DON, and the Administrator, acknowledged that the facility’s practice was to follow the wound care FNP’s recommendations and that the orders in the computer should match those recommendations. Nonetheless, the POS entries did not reflect the FNP’s specified daily dressing changes and detailed application instructions for calcium alginate. The FNP also noted that increased drainage from the toe was related to the resident’s increased activity and did not warrant a decrease in treatment frequency, yet the facility’s orders reduced the frequency to every other day without a corresponding recommendation from the FNP. These documented inconsistencies between the wound care specialist’s certified plan of care and the orders actually entered and followed by the facility staff form the basis of the cited deficiency.
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