Inaccurate MDS Coding for Falls and Urinary Continence
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure that Minimum Data Set (MDS) assessments were accurately completed for three residents. For one resident with a history of cerebral infarction, diabetes, hypertension, heart failure, and need for personal assistance, the fall risk assessment documented a fall in the previous three months, and a fall investigation showed he fell while attempting to transfer from his wheelchair to his bed without staff assistance, with no injury noted. However, the subsequent quarterly MDS assessment documented that he had no falls since admission or the prior MDS, despite the documented fall. The Administrator confirmed that the MDS section J was incorrect because the fall without injury should have been recorded. Another resident with Alzheimer’s disease, chronic kidney disease, and hypertension had multiple documented falls over a three‑month period, including falls resulting in a skin tear and a head injury, as well as two falls without injury. Despite these documented events and an admission MDS completed earlier, the quarterly MDS assessment recorded that the resident had no falls since admission or the prior MDS, and an LPN confirmed that this was inaccurate and that one fall with a head injury should have been coded as a major injury. A third resident with multiple diagnoses, including bullous pemphigoid, morbid obesity, asthma, anxiety, depression, heart disease, hypertension, and neuromuscular bladder dysfunction, had a physician’s order for an indwelling urinary catheter with daily catheter care and daily monitoring of urinary output. The annual comprehensive MDS assessment documented that this resident had an indwelling Foley catheter but was always incontinent of urine, whereas an RN confirmed that the resident was always continent of urine due to the Foley catheter, indicating inaccurate coding in the bowel and bladder section.
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