Failure to Notify Provider of Significant Hypotension and Bradycardia During Neuro Monitoring
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure timely physician notification of a significant change in condition for one resident who was under 72‑hour neurological monitoring following a fall with head injury. The resident was an older male with COPD, dementia, depression, anxiety, dysphagia after stroke, cognitive communication deficit, lack of coordination, and gastrostomy status. His admission MDS showed short‑ and long‑term memory impairment, moderate impairment in decision‑making, fluctuating inattention and disorganized thinking, altered level of consciousness, and wandering 4–6 days per week. He had a history of two or more falls with injury since admission. His care plan addressed falls, helmet use, and neurological checks per facility protocol, but did not identify problems or interventions related to hypotension or bradycardia. Prior to admission to the facility, the resident had been hospitalized for septic shock secondary to pneumonia and influenza A, requiring ICU care, vasopressors, antibiotics, and mechanical ventilation, and was started on Midodrine for hypotension. At the facility, he sustained a fall on 11/19 with a forehead laceration; he was evaluated in the ER, where CT imaging was negative for intracranial bleeding or fracture, and he returned to the facility for continued neurological assessments. Neurological assessment entries on 11/20 and 11/21 documented stable vital signs and normal findings, although one scheduled assessment on 11/21 at 9:45 PM was not documented. On 11/22 at 5:45 AM, a neurological assessment entry documented normal findings and stable vital signs, and additional neurological entries for that date were later signed, but there was no contemporaneous documentation of abnormal neurological findings. The resident’s MAR showed that from 11/8 through 11/21, his BP readings were consistently above 110/60 and his pulse consistently above 60 bpm. On 11/22, his day‑shift BP dropped to 97/52 with a pulse of 56, and a vital signs log entry at 9:09 AM documented a further drop to 81/48 with HR 55. A PRN order for Midodrine 5 mg q8h PRN for systolic BP <90 had been in place since 11/7 but had never been used before. At 9:06 AM on 11/22, an LVN administered Midodrine due to the BP of 81/48 and HR 55 and documented the administration as effective, but there was no further assessment or monitoring documented after this episode and no documentation that the physician was notified of the hypotension, bradycardia, or first‑time use of the PRN Midodrine. Progress notes for 11/22 contained no additional entries after 9:06 AM regarding the resident’s status. On the following day, 11/23 at 5:57 AM, vital signs were recorded as BP 110/56 and HR 60, and a progress note at 5:58 AM documented that the prior PRN Midodrine dose was effective, without describing how effectiveness was determined. At approximately 6:30 AM, staff observed the resident with new left‑sided weakness and facial drooping after a shower, and he was unable to mouth words as he typically did. A change in condition note at 7:08 AM documented left‑sided facial droop, left‑sided weakness, hemiparesis, and vital signs including BP 102/58 and pulse 51. EMS was called for possible stroke, and EMS records noted a pulse of 45 bpm and bilateral lower extremity swelling, with staff reporting onset of symptoms around 6:30 AM. Hospital records later documented that upon evaluation in the emergency department, the resident was hypotensive and diagnosed with bilateral pneumonia, septic shock, and acute metabolic encephalopathy. Interviews with the DON, NP, and MD confirmed that the provider was not notified at the time of the 11/22 hypotension and bradycardia episode, and the DON stated she would not have considered the decrease in BP and HR with first‑time PRN Midodrine use to be a change in condition requiring physician notification, despite the facility’s Notification of Changes policy requiring consultation with the physician for significant changes in condition or new treatment.
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