Failure to Provide Ordered PEG Nutrition, Monitor Weight Loss, and Assist With Feeding
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to maintain acceptable nutritional status and follow physician and hospital discharge orders for a cognitively intact female resident with Wernicke’s encephalopathy, aneurysm, dysphagia, anorexia, and a newly placed PEG tube. On admission from the hospital, her discharge summary specified a regular diet with pureed texture for comfort only, explicitly stating that this oral intake was not sufficient for nutrition and that she had a PEG and should otherwise remain NPO. Despite this, the facility did not have an active, specific enteral feeding formula order in place for her PEG tube from admission through the date of the state survey entrance, and there was no active diagnosis for a gastrostomy tube documented on her admission MDS. An undated, unsigned handwritten note in the EMR referenced PEG use and Jevity 1.5 via NG tube, but this was not translated into a clear, implemented PEG feeding order. Instead of initiating PEG feedings, the facility obtained an order several days after admission for Ensure Plus PO TID and continued a regular pureed diet for “pleasure food.” Medication administration records showed that the resident refused all three daily Ensure doses on multiple days, had days with no documentation at all, and on some days was noted as nauseated, vomiting, or asleep at the time of administration. Nursing staff, including medication aides, reported that the resident had not really been taking her Ensure since admission because she could not swallow and that she regularly refused medications and supplements. The NP and MD both stated they were not notified of the resident’s refusals, lack of enteral feeding orders, or any significant weight loss, and believed she was tolerating a pureed diet based on information from facility staff. The resident herself reported that while in the hospital she had received a milk-like formula through a tube, that the tube was later placed directly into her stomach, and that since admission to the facility she only received water through the tube and no medications or feeding formulas. The facility also failed to obtain and monitor weekly weights as ordered and per policy. The only documented weight after admission was 120 lbs recorded seven days post-admission, which the DON later crossed out as inaccurate without knowing the resident’s true admission or current weight. A subsequent weight entry showed 96.5 lbs, reflecting a 23.5 lb loss and a 19% weight reduction in 12 days, but this significant change was not reported to the NP or MD. The DON acknowledged that weekly weights had not been done due to changes and inconsistency among CNAs and that she did not know who was responsible for obtaining weights. A CNA reported having no formal training on how to weigh residents and was unable to obtain an accurate weight for the resident due to lack of wheelchair tare weight and the resident’s refusal to transfer. Additionally, the resident’s risk of impaired nutrition related to her PEG tube and therapeutic diet orders was not addressed in a timely manner, and dietary recommendations were not in place from admission until the surveyor’s entrance. Direct observation by the surveyor further demonstrated failures in providing adequate assistance with meals. On the survey date, the resident was observed seated alone in a wheelchair with an uncovered, uneaten pureed breakfast tray in front of her; she stated she was hungry and needed help eating, but no staff had assisted her. The DON and RN assigned to her were initially unaware that she had not eaten. A receptionist, not clinical staff, ultimately reheated the tray and offered to assist before the RN took over. The resident’s representative reported having found her on at least two separate occasions in front of untouched meal trays without staff assistance and stated that when they raised concerns, an RN responded that the resident needed to learn to use her left hand to feed herself despite her right-sided weakness and prior right-hand dominance. These combined inactions and failures to follow orders, monitor intake and weight, and provide necessary feeding assistance led to the identified deficiency and were determined by surveyors to constitute Immediate Jeopardy until corrected.
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