Failure to Complete Ordered Weights and Notify Physician of Significant Weight Changes
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to obtain and document ordered weights, ensure consistent and appropriate weight orders, complete timely reweights, and notify physicians of significant weight changes for multiple residents. For one resident with hemiplegia, metabolic encephalopathy, dysphagia, anoxic brain damage, gastrostomy status, and aphasia, the care plan identified nutritional risk and significant one‑month weight loss, with interventions including weights as ordered and physician notification for significant changes. The physician ordered weekly post‑admission weights for four weeks, and the resident was receiving continuous enteral feeding via PEG tube. The record showed an initial hospital weight of 135 lbs and a facility weight of 130.8 lbs on 03/07/26, but no weight was documented on the MAR for the ordered weekly weights due on 02/28/26, 03/14/26, 03/20/26, or 03/27/26. The dietitian confirmed weekly weights were not completed as ordered and that residents on tube feeds are required by facility policy to receive weekly weights. The UM acknowledged the missed weights and attributed them to a Hoyer‑compatible scale being out of service, but there was no documentation of equipment malfunction, and the Administrator and Regional Nurse denied awareness of any scale issues. Another resident with chronic respiratory failure, ESRD, chronic diastolic heart failure, AV block, pulmonary hypertension, type 2 diabetes, hypertension, PAF, and bradycardia had a care plan identifying risk for fluid imbalance and interventions including obtaining weights as ordered and notifying the physician of significant weight changes. This resident had concurrent physician orders for daily weights for chronic heart failure and weekly weights for post‑admission monitoring, creating duplicate and conflicting orders. The weight summary showed an increase from 159.3 lbs to 177.5 lbs between 03/07/26 and 03/10/26, an 18.2 lb (11.42%) gain, with subsequent weights remaining elevated. Daily weights were missing on several ordered days, and there was no documentation of refusals. Progress notes from 03/08/26 through 04/01/26 contained no evidence that the physician was notified of the significant weight gain. The dietitian and UM confirmed there was no documentation of physician notification or refusals, and the UM acknowledged the conflicting daily and weekly weight orders. The physician later stated he did not recall being informed of the approximately 18 lb change and that such a change in a resident with ESRD and chronic heart failure is significant and should be reported. A third resident with morbid obesity, type 2 diabetes, lymphedema, and protein‑calorie malnutrition had a care plan noting potential nutritional risk related to therapeutic diet, high BMI, obesity, depression, and extensive food dislikes, with interventions including obtaining weights as ordered and notifying the physician of significant weight changes. The weight summary showed a decrease from 328.6 lbs to 315.0 lbs, a 13.6 lb (4.14%) loss. Facility policy required a reweight for residents over 100 lbs if weight changed more than 5 lbs. A UM entered a physician order for a daily weight intended to obtain a reweight, but the order was entered with a start date of 02/01/26 and an end date of 01/30/26, rendering it inactive. No reweight was obtained, and progress notes from 02/01/26 through 02/08/26 showed no refusals or attempts to reweigh. A later dietitian note documented that the resident refused a weight that week, referenced the 315.0 lb weight, and recommended continuation of weekly weights, but no new weight was obtained at that time. Facility leadership confirmed the order was not placed correctly and that the required reweight was not completed. Across these three residents, the facility’s own weight monitoring policies required weekly weights for new admissions and high‑risk residents, reweights for significant changes, and physician notification of significant weight fluctuations. The records and interviews showed repeated failures to carry out ordered weekly and daily weights, to resolve contradictory or duplicate weight orders, to complete reweights when thresholds were met, and to document or act on significant weight changes. Dietitian emails requesting pending weights were not acted upon, and there was no documentation of refusals or equipment issues to explain the missed weights. These actions and inactions resulted in the cited deficiency for failing to provide sufficient food and fluids to maintain residents’ health through appropriate weight monitoring and physician notification.
Penalty
Resources
Below are regulatory guidelines relevant to this citation:
Trusted data from CMS and state health departments
Every citation, penalty and Plan of Correction is sourced from public CMS records (latest release June 24, 2026) and official state health department websites — never guesswork.
Trusted by long-term care providers and associations.



