MDS assessments did not match residents’ documented functional status
Summary
The facility failed to ensure that MDS assessments accurately reflected residents’ functional status for six of eight residents reviewed for MDS accuracy. The report states that the RAI User’s Manual requires the MDS to reflect the resident’s usual performance based on direct observation, communication with the resident, and communication with direct care staff across shifts, and that Section GG must match the resident’s actual performance during the assessment period associated with the ARD. For Resident 2, who was admitted with cerebral infarction, the Annual MDS indicated partial or moderate assistance for personal hygiene and bed mobility, but the clinical record during the assessment period showed the resident was dependent for personal hygiene on five of nine occasions and required substantial or maximal assistance on three of nine occasions, and was dependent for bed mobility on three of nine occasions with substantial or maximal assistance on five of nine occasions. For Resident 14, admitted with Alzheimer’s disease, the Quarterly MDS indicated partial or moderate assistance with eating and substantial or maximal assistance with personal hygiene and bed mobility, while documentation showed dependence for eating on five of six occasions, dependence for personal hygiene on nine of nine occasions, and dependence for bed mobility on nine of nine occasions. For Resident 6, admitted with dementia, the Annual MDS indicated substantial or maximal assistance with toileting hygiene and bathing, but the record showed dependence for toileting hygiene on nine of nine occasions and dependence for bathing on two of two occasions. For Resident 4, admitted with acquired absence of the left leg below the knee and right hip joint, the Quarterly MDS indicated substantial or maximal assistance with bathing and partial or moderate assistance with personal hygiene and bed mobility, while documentation showed dependence for bathing on four of four occasions, dependence for personal hygiene on five of seven occasions with substantial or maximal assistance on two of seven occasions, and dependence for bed mobility on five of eight occasions with substantial or maximal assistance on three of eight occasions. For Resident 39, admitted with end-stage renal disease, the Quarterly MDS indicated substantial or maximal assistance with bathing, partial or moderate assistance with personal hygiene, and supervision or touching assistance with wheelchair mobility, but the record showed dependence for bathing on one of one occasion, dependence for personal hygiene on four of four occasions, and dependence for wheelchair mobility on two of two occasions; the same resident’s Quarterly MDS also indicated no falls in the prior month or prior two to six months, although the clinical record showed a fall at the facility resulting in an acute right femoral intertrochanteric fracture. For Resident 7, admitted with diabetes and hemiplegia, the admission MDS indicated partial or moderate assistance with personal hygiene, while documentation showed dependence on staff for personal hygiene on five of seven occasions and substantial or maximal assistance on two of seven occasions. The RN Assessment Coordinator acknowledged that the MDS assessments for Residents 2, 4, 6, 7, 14, and 39 did not accurately reflect the residents’ status documented in the clinical record.
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