Failure to Follow Provider Orders for Change in Condition, Wound Care, and PICC Line Removal
Summary
The deficiency involves multiple failures to provide treatment and care according to provider orders and facility guidelines, including failure to promptly notify a provider of a change in condition, failure to complete ordered wound care, and failure to ensure timely removal and care of a PICC line. For one resident with Alzheimer's disease, late-onset dementia, and severe cognitive impairment, nursing documentation showed that on one evening the resident had an oxygen saturation of 85% on room air, was very sleepy, and only briefly responded to name before falling back asleep. Oxygen at two liters via nasal cannula was applied and a note was left in the physician book, but there was no evidence that the NP or physician was directly notified at that time, despite facility guidelines requiring immediate provider notification for changes in condition or mental status. The next morning, the NP was called to assess the resident for altered mental status and hypoxia and ordered transfer to the ER, later confirming that she had not been made aware of the change in condition until that day and that the nurse should have called when the low oxygen saturation and decreased responsiveness were first observed. Another part of the deficiency concerns two residents whose wound care was not completed as ordered. One resident with a history of pneumonia, gangrene of the left great toe, and recent left great toe removal had physician orders beginning on a specified date to cleanse the left great toe wound with normal saline, pat dry, and apply ordered dressings daily. Review of the MARs and TARs showed no evidence that the ordered left great toe wound treatments were completed on three specific dates. Wound observation on a later date documented that the left great toe wound had increased in size, with necrotic tissue, thin watery exudate, and a high percentage of eschar, and noted that the area had increased, prompting recommendations for vascular referral, antibiotics, and new treatment orders. The regional RN confirmed the absence of documentation of wound care on the missed dates, and the resident’s spouse reported feeling that care and services for the toe wound were not provided timely. A second resident with surgical wounds on the left lower extremity and left upper thigh had physician orders for wound care that included cleansing with normal saline, patting dry, applying silver alginate, and covering with an abdominal dressing secured with tape, initially every other day and later once daily during the day shift. Review of the MARs and TARs showed no evidence that wound care to the left lower extremity was completed on three specified dates and that wound care to the left upper thigh was not completed on three other specified dates, with documentation indicating that the morning shift nurse did not complete the treatments on some of those days. The regional RN confirmed these findings. The facility’s Clean Technique Wound Care policy required that wound care be provided using professional standards of practice, but the ordered treatments were not consistently carried out or documented. The deficiency also includes failure to ensure timely removal and care of a PICC line for another resident admitted with metabolic encephalopathy, chronic diastolic heart failure, peripheral vascular disease, and end stage renal disease. The resident was receiving IV antibiotics via PICC line, and a progress note documented that the physician ordered removal of the PICC line after being informed that antibiotics would be given during dialysis. A subsequent note recorded that a vascular access team attempted removal but did not proceed due to the PICC line’s proximity to an existing dialysis catheter and lack of documentation from the inserting hospital, recommending that the facility contact the inserting facility to schedule removal. An order was entered to schedule an appointment for PICC line removal, but there was no further PICC line order and no documentation of PICC line care. No documentation showed that the inserting facility was contacted until several days later, when a nurse documented refaxing the removal order after a call from the hospital. The PICC line was ultimately removed when the resident went to the hospital ER for hypoglycemia during dialysis, indicating that the ordered removal had not been completed in a timely manner within the facility.
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