Failure to Provide Ordered IV Therapy and PICC Line Care
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide safe, appropriate IV therapy and PICC line care in accordance with physician orders, the resident’s care plan, and professional standards of practice for one resident. The resident was re-admitted with a PICC line and multiple serious diagnoses, including end stage renal disease, abdominal pelvic abscess on chronic IV daptomycin therapy, dependence on dialysis, history of sepsis, and other complex conditions. The care plan and physician orders required regular IV antibiotic administration, routine PICC line flushing, dressing changes, monitoring of the PICC site, and measurement of arm circumference and external catheter length. These orders were intended to support ongoing treatment of the resident’s chronic pelvic abscess and to maintain PICC line patency and integrity. Record review showed that from early February through early April, normal saline flushes ordered every 8 hours were not consistently administered and were often documented as not given, held, or left blank on the MAR, indicating they were not performed as ordered. Required PICC-related assessments and care were also missed or undocumented: arm circumference above the insertion site was not documented or completed on specified dates, external catheter length was not documented or completed on a required date, and PICC needless connector changes were not documented or completed on two ordered dates. IV daptomycin doses ordered for administration after dialysis on specific Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays were not administered on multiple ordered days. Additionally, although the MAR showed that PICC dressing changes were documented as completed on three separate dates in March, a photograph dated later in March showed the PICC dressing still bearing a date and initials from mid-March, indicating the dressing had not been changed every 7 days as ordered. Further, hospital documentation from early April stated that the resident, known for a non-operable chronic pelvic abscess on chronic antibiotics and frequent admissions for sepsis, was brought to the ER minimally responsive, and that the PICC line had been accidentally removed at the nursing home sometime in the prior 24 hours. The EMT report from that day did not indicate a PICC line in place during transport. Interviews with nursing staff revealed confusion and inconsistency regarding who was responsible for PICC care. One LPN stated that dialysis usually completed all PICC care and reported not doing anything with the PICC line, despite the LPN’s initials appearing on the MAR for PICC flushes, external catheter length measurements, and dressing changes, with some entries marked as not administered. The LPN could not explain why their initials appeared on the MAR. An RN reported that the PICC functioned well and believed, but was not certain, that the PICC was in place before transfer. The DON stated there were no progress notes indicating accidental PICC removal or malfunction and was unaware of the missed PICC care tasks and discrepancies between MAR documentation and the dated dressing shown in the photograph. The DON confirmed that staff were expected to complete all provider orders as written and to notify leadership and the provider if orders could not be followed. The combination of missed IV flushes, missed or undocumented PICC assessments and connector changes, missed IV antibiotic doses, inaccurate or conflicting MAR documentation, and lack of clear recognition or reporting of PICC line issues prior to hospital transfer constituted the failure to ensure the resident received IV therapy and PICC care consistent with physician orders, the care plan, and professional standards of practice.
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.



