Failure to individualize and monitor pressure ulcer prevention and wound care
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide resident-centered pressure ulcer prevention and monitoring for two residents at risk for skin breakdown. One resident was admitted without skin conditions but had a history of cerebral infarction with right-sided hemiplegia, immobility, and incontinence, and was identified as having a moderate risk for pressure ulcers based on Braden scores ranging from 14 to 16 during the first four weeks after admission. On admission, her sacral and coccyx areas were documented as pink and blanchable. On a later date, an RN documented two non-blanchable suspected deep tissue pressure injuries to the coccyx, with large areas measuring 17 cm x 25 cm and 8 cm x 7 cm, described as dark maroon and slightly boggy. A repositioning schedule every two hours was initiated and the physician and POA were notified, and a mepilex dressing was ordered and later modified, but the resident’s baseline care plan problem and interventions for pressure ulcer risk were not revised from admission through the identification of the coccyx wound and up to her hospital transfer. Subsequent nursing documentation for this resident showed that the coccyx wound progressed to an unstageable pressure ulcer with 100% black, dry, firmly adherent eschar measuring approximately 8 cm x 3 cm. The skin nurse consulted the contracted wound specialist and physician, and a treatment with medihoney and daily dressing changes was ordered. The resident later developed a fever and was sent to the emergency room for evaluation of possible infection related to the coccyx wound, where imaging and surgical evaluation identified surrounding cellulitis and reactive edema in the coccyx, and a debridement with bone biopsy revealed multiple bacteria. Throughout this period, despite ongoing moderate Braden risk scores and the development and progression of the coccyx wound, the resident’s care plan interventions for pressure ulcer risk remained unchanged from the original admission plan. The second resident was admitted with two stage II pressure ulcers on the left buttock, measuring 0.5 cm x 0.5 cm and 3 cm x 5 cm, and had a care plan problem for potential pressure ulcers related to immobility, incontinence, and neuropathy. Her care plan also listed existing pressure injuries to both buttocks at stage III, with approaches including turning and repositioning, assessing and documenting ulcer condition per facility protocol, and treating per protocol. A nursing progress note a few days after admission documented two new open pressure injuries on the left buttock, each measuring 1 cm x 0.5 cm. However, after this entry, there were no further documented wound measurements or characteristics such as size, color, drainage, odor, or other assessment details in the EMR. Interviews with staff revealed additional process failures related to pressure ulcer prevention and monitoring. CNAs reported that they relied on daily paper sheets to track repositioning and could only enter a single checkmark per shift in the EMR to indicate that repositioning every two hours had been done, without documenting each individual turn. The DON stated that CNAs were expected to document two-hour turns in the EMR and that nurses were expected to document refusals, but she was unaware that CNAs were limited to a single checkmark per shift. The DON also acknowledged that residents admitted with risk for pressure ulcers had the same care plan interventions, that care plans were expected to reflect skin concerns found on admission, and that there was no established process for completion of resident wound assessments. She further acknowledged that documenting a dressing change was not the same as documenting a wound assessment and that she would have expected weekly wound assessments and care plan updates when additional pressure injuries were identified, which did not occur for the residents involved. Review of the facility’s Skin Care/Pressure Ulcer policy showed that all residents were considered at risk upon admission and that interventions such as pressure-reducing mattresses, full-body skin assessments, dietician review, and individualized care plan interventions were required. The policy also required assessment of pressure ulcers for type, stage, characteristics, progress toward healing, infection, pain, dressings or treatments, and physician notification if there was no improvement in two to three weeks, as well as weekly documentation of detailed wound characteristics. The documented care and records for the two residents did not reflect consistent implementation of these policy requirements, including individualized care planning, regular wound assessments, and complete documentation of wound status and repositioning.
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