Inaccurate Neurological and Fall Risk Documentation for Two Residents
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to maintain accurate, complete, and policy-compliant medical records for two residents, specifically related to fall risk assessments and neurological evaluation flow sheets. For the first resident, admitted with diagnoses including fibromyalgia, cervical disc displacement, and hypertension, the General Acute Care Hospital history and physical documented a recent fall in the shower and that the resident was alert, oriented, and able to move all extremities. The facility’s fall risk assessment for this resident showed a score of nine, categorizing the resident as low risk for falls, but key sections on ambulation/elimination status, gait/balance, and systolic blood pressure were left incomplete. RN 1 and the DON both acknowledged that these omissions meant the assessment was incomplete and that, if fully completed, the score would have been 10 or higher, indicating a high fall risk. The same resident’s Neurological Evaluation Flow Sheet dated 4/8/2026 contained multiple documentation errors and omissions. The tool included instructions for an initial neurological assessment followed by checks every 15 minutes for four times, every 30 minutes for four times, every hour for two times, and then once per shift for 72 hours, as well as specific codes to document respiratory patterns (N, BR, C, B, T, H). The flow sheet showed an initial assessment at 5:30 PM and subsequent entries at 5:45 PM, 6:00 PM, 6:15 PM, 6:30 PM, 7:00 PM, 7:30 PM, 8:00 PM, 8:30 PM, 9:00 PM, 9:30 PM, and 10:00 PM, but the 10:00 PM column had no assessment documented, and there was no documented neurological assessment at 10:30 PM despite the required hourly frequency. RN 1, RN 2, and the DON all verified that the last completed assessment was at 9:30 PM, that the 10:00 PM column was blank, and that there was no evidence of resident refusal. They also confirmed that respiratory patterns were incorrectly documented as “3/10” and “0/10” instead of using the required letter codes, meaning the instructions on the form were not followed. For the second resident, who had diagnoses including anemia, muscle weakness, and osteoarthritis, the MDS indicated severely impaired cognitive skills for daily decision-making and varying levels of assistance needed for ADLs, as well as a history of at least one fall since admission. The resident’s Neurological Evaluation Flow Sheet from 3/19/2026 to 3/21/2026 contained instructions identical to those for the first resident regarding the use of specific letter codes to document respiratory patterns. However, the flow sheet showed the letter “R” documented in all respiratory pattern boxes over that period, even though “R” was not one of the approved codes listed in the instructions. RN 1 and the DON both confirmed that this documentation was inaccurate because it did not follow the specified coding system. The facility’s policy on charting and documentation required that medical record entries be objective, complete, and accurate, and that only facility-approved abbreviations and symbols be used, which was not adhered to in these instances. The survey findings concluded that these failures in documentation for both residents—leaving required sections of the fall risk assessment incomplete, omitting required neurological checks, and using non-approved or incorrect notations for respiratory patterns—did not comply with the facility’s charting and documentation policy. The report stated that this deficient practice had the potential to result in miscommunication, improper delivery of care, and inaccurate information about the care provided to the residents.
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