Failure to Monitor Change in Condition and Coordinate Post-Operative Transportation
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide appropriate, resident-centered treatment and monitoring following a change in condition for one resident, and failure to coordinate timely, resident-centered transportation and post-operative care for another. For the first resident, who had hemiplegia, muscle weakness, and extensive self-care deficits requiring dependence on staff for mobility, transfers, and toileting, staff identified a large bruise and fluid-filled sac on the right lower extremity in the early morning hours. The wound included a large bruise, a fluid-filled sac with a central tear, and serosanguinous drainage. The area was cleansed and dressed, and the DON and physician/NP were notified. The DON later documented that the ADON had reported an incident on the transport bus the previous day in which the resident had slid down in the wheelchair and the leg had pressed against the footrest, corresponding to the injury site. The resident’s temperature was documented as elevated at 100.7°F, and Tylenol was administered for pain and fever. Despite the documented injury and elevated temperature, there was no evidence in the medical record of ongoing monitoring of vital signs (temperature, pulse, blood pressure) from the morning of one day to the early morning of the next, when the resident’s condition further declined. A subsequent nursing note documented that the resident was “not himself,” with increased shaking/tremors, eyes rolling back, increased slurred speech, and another elevated temperature, at which point the NP ordered transfer to the hospital. Hospital records showed the resident presented with altered mental status and was found to have an acute, nondisplaced fracture of the proximal right tibia with associated soft tissue edema and joint effusion, and he was admitted for altered mental status, fall, and right tibia fracture. Interviews confirmed that there was no documented vital sign monitoring during the period between the initial identification of the leg injury and fever and the later deterioration, and the facility could not provide a Quality of Care policy. For the second resident, who had end-stage renal disease on hemodialysis, chronic kidney disease, hypertension, and other comorbidities, the deficiency centered on the facility’s failure to coordinate transportation and ensure timely return after a scheduled vascular surgery. The resident had been hospitalized for acute DVT and started on Eliquis, with vascular surgery in Cleveland to be arranged. After a subsequent appointment, Eliquis was stopped and surgery scheduled. The resident underwent a left upper extremity brachial axillary loop graft and ligation of a brachial pre-conditioning fistula and was cleared for discharge the next day with instructions for daily wound inspection and monitoring for signs of infection or complications. The Administrator reported that when informed the resident would be ready for pick-up at 8:00 p.m., he told the hospital the facility could not pick the resident up that late, and the NP agreed to keep the resident overnight so the facility could retrieve him the next morning, making the overnight stay due to lack of transportation back to the facility. On the day of discharge, the resident was reportedly discharged from the hospital in the morning and called the facility around the time of discharge, then repeatedly every twenty minutes, asking to be picked up. Staff interviews and phone records indicated the resident remained in Cleveland for several hours, including time spent waiting outside the hospital, before facility staff arrived later in the afternoon. The transportation scheduler stated she could only arrange transportation if she received appointment paperwork or an order, and the DON stated nurses were expected to enter outside appointments into the medical record orders tab and notify the scheduler or DON. The RN who first received the surgery paperwork documented a note but did not notify the scheduler or DON or enter an order, and the facility did not know about the need for transportation until the day before surgery. As a result of the delayed return, the resident did not receive certain scheduled 5:00 p.m. medications, including sodium bicarbonate and sevelamer, and was documented as being upset about the delay and in moderate pain upon return, with pain medication administered later that evening. The facility’s own transportation policy stated it would provide safe, non-emergency transportation to appointments, but the coordination failures led to the resident’s prolonged wait and missed medications. Overall, the surveyors found that the facility failed to adequately monitor a resident after a significant change in condition related to a leg injury and elevated temperature, and failed to coordinate transportation services in a resident-centered manner following surgery, resulting in delayed return and missed medications. These failures affected two residents reviewed for quality of care, and the facility was unable to produce a Quality of Care policy during the investigation.
Penalty
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