Failure to Monitor Changes in Condition and Implement Ordered Treatments for Two Residents
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide appropriate treatment and care according to orders, resident preferences, and goals, including failure to follow up on skin breakdown, document skilled assessments and vital signs, notify the physician of changes in condition, and implement physician orders after an office visit. For one resident, admitted with diagnoses including Parkinson’s disease, essential hypertension, dorsalgia, and a history of thoracic spine fracture, the record showed that vital signs were obtained on admission and once later that evening, but no further vital signs were documented during the remainder of the stay despite the resident being a skilled resident who, per the DON, should have had skilled assessments with vitals twice daily. Skilled documentation entries were missing on multiple days, and when present, did not include vital signs. The physician progress note relied on outdated vital signs, and the resident was documented as receiving oxygen via nasal cannula without any corresponding physician order for oxygen. Further review showed that the physician had ordered monitoring of lung sounds, pulse rate, and pulse oximetry before and after nebulizer and incentive spirometry treatments, with documentation of setup and monitoring time each shift. The Treatment Administration Record reflected only the setup time and lacked any documentation of lung sounds, pulse, or pulse oximetry as ordered. A nurse’s note documented that a urine specimen was obtained by straight catheterization and that an open area was observed on the right abdominal fold and groin extending to the outer right hip, as well as a raised area on the left outer labia. The areas were cleansed and treated with a barrier product, and the nurse stated the nurse practitioner was notified; however, there was no documentation on the Treatment Administration Record of ongoing monitoring of these open or raised areas. Later, the same nurse documented holding a dose of Cyclobenzaprine because the resident was lethargic and difficult to arouse, but there was no documented notification to the physician or NP regarding this change in condition. On the morning of the resident’s death, staff administered morning medications without documenting vital signs, and EMS records indicated the nurse reported the resident had presented with lethargy and hypotension that morning and that medications were withheld due to this, which was not reflected in the facility’s documentation. The deficiency also includes failure to implement physician orders following an office visit for another resident with multiple diagnoses including diverticulosis, anemia, obstructive sleep apnea, atrial fibrillation, sick sinus syndrome, and unspecified hemorrhoids. Gynecology visit notes documented a diagnosis of a labial cyst and orders for sitz bath treatments. A subsequent facility physician progress note referenced that the labial cyst was being managed by gynecology with recommendations to continue sitz baths. However, there were no corresponding physician orders or care plan interventions in the facility record for sitz bath treatments. The resident reported that the facility did not have the necessary equipment and that sitz baths did not begin until her representative provided a sitz bath basin and Epsom salt, at which point she reported improved comfort. Staff interviews confirmed that sitz baths were not initiated until weeks after the order and that the treatments ordered by gynecology were not implemented in a timely manner. Facility policies on charting, documentation, and medication and treatment orders stated that records should facilitate communication about resident condition and that treatment orders should be implemented consistent with safe and effective order writing, but the documented practices for these two residents did not align with those policies. Family and staff interviews further described events surrounding the first resident’s decline. The resident’s family reported difficulty reaching the resident by phone and stated that when they did speak with her, she said something was not right and that she was going to be sent to the emergency room, but the family did not hear from the facility until after the resident was pronounced dead. The family also reported that during a prior visit the resident had been hallucinating, which they reported to nursing staff, but they were never informed of any physician response. A CNA reported that on the morning of the resident’s death the resident refused to get out of bed, which was not normal for her, and that this was reported to the LPN. The DON confirmed that vital signs were not obtained for several days, that staff were not monitoring the documented open abdominal and groin areas or the raised labial area, that oxygen was used without an order, and that ordered monitoring for incentive spirometry was not documented. The medical director confirmed that staff should notify the physician or on-call NP for any change in condition. These documented omissions and failures in assessment, monitoring, documentation, and implementation of orders for both residents formed the basis of the cited quality of care deficiency.
Penalty
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