Failure to Provide Necessary Behavioral Health Care and Suicide Precautions After Psychiatric Discharge
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide necessary, person-centered behavioral health treatment and services to a resident with severe psychiatric diagnoses and a recent history of suicidal behavior. The resident, an older adult female with major depressive disorder, PTSD, bipolar disorder, delusional disorder, and recent visual loss, had been admitted from an inpatient psychiatric facility after presenting with suicidal ideation and superficial wrist lacerations. At the psychiatric facility, she was treated with olanzapine, which was titrated and continued as a scheduled nightly medication for psychosis, mood stabilization, sleep, and appetite, and she was discharged with an order for olanzapine 5 mg disintegrating tablet every night at bedtime for mood symptoms. The psychiatrist later confirmed that olanzapine was intended as a scheduled bedtime medication and that it does not work as a PRN for depression or psychosis, and that abrupt discontinuation in a person with bipolar disorder could lead to recurrence of psychotic and mood symptoms. Upon admission to the facility, the discharge order for scheduled nightly olanzapine was inaccurately transcribed by the admitting nurse as a PRN medication to be given every 24 hours as needed for mood for 14 days. This incorrect PRN order was then carried forward in the medical record and was administered only once during the resident’s stay, with no documented reason for its use. Multiple providers, including two NPs and a psychiatric‑mental health NP, later stated they were not aware that the olanzapine had been entered as PRN instead of scheduled, and they did not reconcile the facility’s orders against the psychiatric discharge summary. A pharmacy consultation identified the discrepancy between the hospital’s scheduled order and the facility’s PRN order, but the DON assumed the PRN status had been intentionally changed by a provider and did not clarify the order, despite signing off on the pharmacy recommendation. As a result, the resident did not receive the intended continuous antipsychotic therapy following discharge from inpatient psychiatry. In addition to the medication error, the facility did not develop or implement an individualized, trauma‑informed care plan addressing the resident’s history of suicide attempts and suicidal ideation. The care plans referenced antipsychotic and antidepressant use and included general interventions such as administering medications as ordered, monitoring side effects, and short‑term 15‑minute checks "as needed," but there were no specific suicide precautions or individualized approaches related to her prior self‑harm. The trauma‑informed care assessment documented that the resident denied listed traumatic events, despite an existing PTSD diagnosis, and the social services director did not explore the basis for that diagnosis. Multiple staff members, including nurses and NAs who regularly cared for the resident, reported they were not aware of her prior suicide attempts and were not informed of any suicide precautions. Statements by the resident indicating she would be better off dead than staying at the facility were not documented or communicated to all staff. Behavior monitoring was not documented on the MAR, and daily progress notes from admission through the days before the incident described her mood as pleasant with no unwanted behaviors, despite reports from staff of agitation and yelling. On the morning of the self‑harm event, staff noted unusual behaviors, including the resident going into other residents’ rooms and agitation the prior night, but there is no documentation of behavioral monitoring or intervention related to suicide risk. Later that morning, the resident was found in her room with the door closed, lying in bed holding a safety razor, with copious blood on her hands, wrists, and abdomen and multiple shallow lacerations to both wrists, both antecubital areas, and the right side of her neck. She was unresponsive except to painful stimuli, with labored breathing, tachypnea, and low oxygen saturation, and was transferred to the emergency department. The surveyors determined that the facility failed to provide necessary behavioral health care and to prevent the resident from obtaining a safety razor and engaging in self‑harm, despite her recent admission from inpatient psychiatry for suicidal behavior and her documented psychiatric conditions and history.
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