Failure to Administer Ordered Oxygen for Residents With Low O2 Saturations
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide oxygen therapy in accordance with physician orders and documented care plans for three residents with low oxygen (O2) saturations. For Resident 2, vital signs on 03/28/2026 at 7:02 AM showed an O2 saturation of 89% on room air, while the medication administration record contained an order to apply oxygen as needed to keep O2 saturations greater than 90%. A medication aide reported the low saturation to the RN by phone and remained with the resident until the RN arrived. The RN confirmed that upon arrival they assessed the resident, then left the bedside to call 911 and prepare transfer paperwork, brought the crash cart to the room area, but did not administer oxygen per the physician’s order and did not recheck the O2 saturation before the resident left the facility. For Resident 6, the admission order dated 11/03/2025 directed staff to apply oxygen as needed to keep O2 saturations above 90%, and the care plan identified the resident as at risk for respiratory distress with a goal to maintain O2 saturations above 88% daily. On 02/18/2026, progress notes documented that at 7:00 AM the resident vomited, appeared tired, and had an O2 saturation of 90% on room air. By 9:30 AM, the resident was lethargic with an O2 saturation of 83% on room air. The RN documented calling the power of attorney and 911, and the resident was transferred out shortly thereafter. In interview, the RN could not recall whether oxygen had been administered, acknowledged leaving the room for an unknown period to obtain transfer paperwork, and there was no documentation that oxygen was applied despite the low saturation and existing orders and care plan goals. For Resident 8, progress notes on 02/18/2026 at 12:30 PM recorded an O2 saturation of 88% on room air, and a call was placed to the provider at that time. Later that day, the Weights and Vitals Summary showed an O2 saturation of 89% on room air, and progress notes indicated the resident was transferred via ambulance to the emergency department that evening. The RN reported calling the primary care provider to report the resident’s condition and stated they asked for an oxygen order, and believed they may have applied oxygen but could not remember. There was no documentation that oxygen was administered prior to transfer. The DON confirmed that oxygen supplies were available on the fourth and fifth floors, that it was their expectation that orders be followed and oxygen applied if O2 saturation remained below 90% after deep breathing and rest, and that record review showed these three residents had O2 saturations below 90% without documented oxygen application before hospital transfer, and that Resident 6’s care plan goal for O2 saturation was not met.
Penalty
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