Failure to Provide Admission Packet and Communicate Resident Rights and Advance Directives
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to inform a resident, both orally and in writing, of her rights, rules, responsibilities, and facility policies at the time of admission. The resident was an elderly female admitted with diagnoses including UTI, history of colon cancer and large intestine, hypertension, irregular heartbeat, presence of a pacemaker, and mild cognitive impairment, with a BIMS score of 12/15 indicating moderately impaired cognition. Her face sheet listed a family member as Emergency Contact and POA for healthcare, and her advance directives section was blank. Progress notes documented that she arrived in the evening by EMS, was A&O x2, oriented to the room and equipment, and did not voice concerns at that time. However, the electronic medical record contained no admission packet or admission agreement for her. Interviews with facility staff revealed inconsistent and incomplete practices regarding the admissions packet, which contained resident rights, rules governing resident conduct, responsibilities, charges, and advance directive information. The Administrator stated that resident rights were communicated through the admissions process and packet, and that the Admissions Coordinator and Marketing were responsible for completion of the packet, which should be provided before or at admission and completed within 72 hours. The DON similarly stated that the packet was sent prior to arrival and completed shortly after admission. In contrast, the Admissions Coordinator initially described her role as getting the room ready and ensuring a good stay, and stated she was not responsible for reviewing documentation. She later stated she was responsible for the admission packet, usually completed after admission and provided via email or in person within 48 hours, but that she did not review the packet contents with residents or their representatives. For this resident, the Admissions Coordinator acknowledged that no admission packet was created or provided, and that the resident’s POA, who was present at admission, never received the packet or any communication of resident rights or other packet contents. She stated she intentionally did not send the packet because she had not yet confirmed the POA status, even though the executed POA was included in documentation received before and after admission. The family member/POA reported that the resident was very confused and distressed on admission, repeatedly stating that people were trying to kill or harm her, and that the family member never received an admission packet or any documentation of rights or other information. The Administrator stated that failure to deliver or communicate the contents of the admissions packet could leave residents unaware of their rights and the facility unaware of residents’ wishes. The record also showed that the resident’s advance directives were not documented in the facility record, and on a later date she received CPR when unresponsive despite her wishes being DNR, with the hospital having handled the DNR paperwork.
Penalty
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