CRITICAL
(J)
Immediate Jeopardy (IJ) - the most serious Medicare violation
Pressure Ulcer Prevention
(Tag F0686)
Someone could have died · This affected 1 resident
Based on observation, interview and record review, facility staff failed to follow physician's order for wound treatment for one resident's (Resident #322) Stage 4 pressure ulcer (a full thickness tis...
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Based on observation, interview and record review, facility staff failed to follow physician's order for wound treatment for one resident's (Resident #322) Stage 4 pressure ulcer (a full thickness tissue loss with exposed bone, tendon and muscle caused by prolonged pressure to a bony area) on the left Ischium (the bottom of the pelvic bone), when facility staff used a bordered gauze dressing to cover Resident 322's wound instead of a Tegaderm dressing, when facility staff packed the resident's wound with gauze instead of Aquacel Ag ribbon, when facility staff failed to reposition the resident every two hours, and when facility staff failed to ensure the resident was not setting in a chair for longer than two hours. The staff failed to follow-up with a scheduled wound clinic appointment per hospital discharge orders, failed to address the resident's complaints of pain in the pressure ulcer area, failed to ensure the resident's low air loss mattress was set to the correct settings according to manufacturer's recommendations, and failed to ensure staff used correct infection control during perineal and wound care when staff did not wash hands and apply clean gloves after gloves were soiled, and when staff wiped feces into an open wound. Additionally, the facility staff failed to apply a pressure relieving device to one resident's (Resident #13) right foot when he/she developed a Stage 3 pressure ulcer to his/her right outer ankle. The facility census was 72.
The facility Administrator was notified on 1/26/24, at 4:07 P.M. of an Immediate Jeopardy (IJ) which began on 1/24/24. The IJ was removed on 1/29/24.
Review of the facility's Pressure Ulcers/Skin Breakdown Clinical Protocol, revised April 2018, showed:
-The nursing staff and practitioner will assess and document an individual's significant risk factors for developing pressure ulcers;
-The staff and practitioner will examine the skin of newly admitted resident for evidence of existing pressure ulcers or other skin conditions;
-The physician will order pertinent wound treatments;
-The physician evaluates and documents the progress of wound healing-especially for those with complicated, extensive, or poorly-healing wounds;
-Current approaches should be reviewed for whether they remain pertinent to the resident's medical condition.
Review of the facility's Prevention of Pressure Injuries policy, revised April 2020, showed:
-The purpose of this procedure is to provide information regarding the identification of pressure injury risk factors and interventions for specific risk factors;
-Inspect the resident's skin on a daily basis when performing personal care or Activities of Daily Living (ADLs):
-Reposition the resident as indicated on the care plan;
-Clean the resident's skin promptly after episodes of incontinence;
-Use facility-approved protective dressings for at risk individuals;
-Reposition all residents with/or at risk of pressure injuries on an individualized schedule;
-Evaluate, report, and document potential changes in the skin;
-Review the interventions and strategies for effectiveness on an ongoing basis.
Review of the facility's Repositioning policy, revised May 2013, showed:
-The purpose of this procedure is to provide guidelines for the evaluation of resident repositioning needs, to promote comfort for all bed or chair bound residents and to prevent skin breakdown and provide pressure relief for residents;
-Review the resident's care plan to evaluate for any special needs of the resident;
-Repositioning is a common, effective intervention for preventing skin breakdown and providing pressure relief;
-Repositioning is critical for a resident who is dependent upon staff for repositioning;
-Positioning the resident on an existing pressure ulcer should be avoided since it puts additional pressure on tissue that is already compromised and may impede healing;
-Evaluate the resident for an existing pressure ulcer;
-A positioning program includes continuous consistent program for changing the resident's position;
-The position program should be document, monitored, and evaluated;
-Residents who are in bed should be on at least every two hour repositioning schedule;
-Residents with a stage I pressure ulcer or above pressure ulcer, every two hour repositioning schedule is inadequate;
-Residents who are in a chair should be on every one hour schedule;
-The position in which the resident was placed should be documented.
Review of the facility's Support Surface Guidelines policy, revised September 2013, showed:
-Procedure is to provide guidelines for the assessment of appropriate pressure reducing and relieving devices for residents at risk of skin breakdown;
-Selecting a mattress for the resident based on pressure ulcer risk is clinically appropriate;
-Use a pressure ulcer risk scale such as the Braden Scale to help determine need for a pressure relieving device.
Review of the facility's Pain policy, revised March 2018, showed:
-The staff and physician with identify the characteristic of pain such as location, intensity, frequency, pattern, and severity;
-The nursing staff will identify any situations or interventions where an increase in the resident's pain may be anticipated; for example, wound care, ambulation, or repositioning;
-The staff will provide the elements of a comforting environment and appropriate physical interventions, such as repositioning;
-The staff will reassess the individual's pain at least every shift.
Review of the facility's Pain Assessment and Management policy, revised March 2020, showed:
-Procedure is used to help the staff identify pain in the resident;
-Possible behavioral signs of pain are, verbal expressions such as groaning or crying, facial grimacing, guarding, or favoring a part of the body;
-Identifying the causes of pain such as pressure, venous or arterial ulcers;
-Review the resident's treatment record to identify any situations where an increase in the resident's pain may be anticipated, for example; treatments such as wound care or dressing changes and repositioning;
-Document the resident's reported pain level with adequate detail.
Review of the facility's Wound Care policy, revised October 2010, showed:
-The purpose of this procedure is to provide guidelines for the care of wounds to promote healing;
-Verify that there is a physician's order for this procedure;
-Review the resident's care plan for orders for pain medication as needed to be administered prior to wound care;
-Use no-touch technique, use sterile tongue blades and applicators to remove ointments and creams from their containers;
-Be certain all items are on a clean field;
-Document the type of wound care given;
-Document all assessment data.
Review of the facility's Dressings, Clean/Dry policy, revised September 2013, showed:
-The purpose of this procedure is to provide guidelines for the application of dry, clean dressings;
-Explain the procedure to the resident;
-Establish a clean field;
-Place equipment on the clean field,
-Wash and dry hands;
-Put on clean gloves;
-Remove old dressing;
-Pull glove over dressing and discard;
-Wash and dry hands;
-Open clean dressing by pulling corners of the exterior wrapping outward, touching only the exterior surface;
-Label dressing with date, time, and initials and place on clean field;
-Using clean technique, open other products;
-Wash and dry hands;
-Put on clean gloves;
-Cleanse the wound with ordered cleanser, use clean gauze for each cleaning stroke, clean from the least contaminated area to the most contaminated area (from the center outward);
-Use dry gauze to pat the wound dry;
-Apply the ordered dressing and secure;
-Discard disposable items;
-Remove gloves and wash hands;
-Document the date and time the dressing was changed;
-Document the wound appearance, including wound bed, edges, and the presence of drainage;
-Report any other information in accordance with facility's policy and professional standards of practice.
Review of Protekt Aire manufacturer's recommendations, undated, showed the low air loss mattress is to be set according to the resident's weight.
1. Review of Resident #322's hospital referral to the facility, dated 11/28/23, showed the wound clinic physician documented the following:
-11/17/23 patient's wound stable;
-Peri-wound fragile, pink, red;
-Wound bed pink, red, yellow;
-Measured 2 centimeters (cm) x 1.5 cm x 1.8 cm;
-Tunneling 4.5 cm at 10 o'clock;
-Undermining 2.5 cm deepest at 9 o'clock
-Wound healing 81%;
-Stage 4;
-Treatment order- clean with wound cleanser, loosely pack with Aqua Ag ribbon, apply transparent adhesive film, change daily.
Review of the hospital infection disease physician's progress note, dated 11/18/23, showed the physician documented left buttock/hip ulceration with osteomyelitis (infection of the bone), ulcer to the level of bone with exposed bone in the base and circumferential undermining (separation of wound edges from the surrounding tissue).
Review of the hospital discharge record, dated 11/30/23, showed the following orders:
-Acetaminophen 500 milligrams (mg) every four hours if needed (PRN) for mild pain;
-Continue current wound care recommendations;
-Follow-up with wound care in one to two weeks;
-Ambulatory referral to wound clinic, office visit;
-Flush the wound with wound cleanser;
-Loosely pack the wound with Aqua ribbon and cover with clear dressing or a wound vac drape;
-Change daily and as needed for soiling/drainage and disruption;
-Needs a low air loss mattress with every two hour turns while awake;
-Resident is not to be in a chair for longer than two hours at a time;
-Scheduled appointment with Wound Care clinic January 2, 2024, at 10:45 A.M.
Review of the resident's admission assessment, dated 11/30/23, showed the following were not checked as completed:
-Physician notified;
-New orders obtained;
-Physician and family notified and new orders received under the skin assessment section.
Review of the resident's admission skin assessment, dated 11/30/23, showed:
-Pressure injury to left buttock;
-Measured 4 cm x 3 cm with a depth of 4 cm, and was unstageable:
-No wound to the resident's coccyx was found;
-No documentation the physician or the family had been notified.
Review of the resident's admission Minimum Data Set (MDS), a federally mandated assessment instrument completed by facility staff, dated 12/6/23, showed:
-Moderate cognitive impairment;
-Dependent on staff for ADLs;
-Dependent on staff for turning and repositioning;
-Pressure reliving devices in chair and bed;
-At risk for pressure ulcers;
-One unhealed pressure area; Stage 3
-Uses non-verbal, vocal complaints and facial grimacing as indicator of pain;
-Pain observed 1 to 2 days out the last 5 days;
-Always incontinent of bowel and bladder;
-Uses a wheelchair;
-Dependent on staff for mobility:
-Diagnosis included: osteomyelitis (a serious infection of the bone), end stage kidney disease, non-pressure chronic ulcer of back, Down Syndrome (a genetic chromosomal disorder that can a cause causing lifelong intellectual disability and developmental delays), diabetes mellitus (a metabolic disease, involving inappropriately elevated blood glucose levels), peripheral vascular disease (progressive circulation disorder caused by narrowing, blockage or spasms in a blood vessel), and atrial fibrillation (a type of abnormal heartbeat).
Review of the resident's weekly skin assessments, dated 11/30/23 to 12/31/23, showed staff documented the following:
-11/30/23 and 12/8/23: left buttock pressure ulcer, measured 4 cm by 3 cm by 4 cm, unstageable;
-12/15/23: left buttock pressure ulcer, measured 4 cm by 3 cm by 4 cm, Stage III (full thickness loss, subcutaneous fat may be visible but bone, tendon or muscle are not exposed);
-12/22/23 and 12/29/23: left buttock pressure ulcer, measured 3 cm by 3 cm by 6 cm, Stage III, wound is tunneling, treatment done per order.
-Review showed staff did not document a description of the resident's wound bed, drainage, location of tunneling, description of the wound edges or if there was an odor.
Review of the resident's Braden Scale assessment (predicts pressure ulcer risk), dated 1/5/24, showed a score of 14, indicating a moderate risk for pressure ulcer development.
Review of the resident's weekly skin assessments, dated 1/1/24 to 1/19/24, showed staff documented the following:
-1/5/23: left buttock pressure ulcer, measured 3 cm by 2 cm by 6 cm, Stage III, wound is tunneling, treatment done per order;
1/12/23: left buttock pressure ulcer, measured 3 cm by 3 cm by 6 cm, Stage III, wound is tunneling, treatment done per order;
1/19/23: left buttock pressure ulcer, measured 3 cm by 1.5 cm by 4 cm, Stage III, wound is tunneling, treatment done per order.
-Review showed staff did not document a description of the resident's wound bed, drainage, location of tunneling, description of the wound edges or if there was an odor.
Review of the resident's Weights and Vitals Summary, dated 1/10/24, showed staff documented the resident's weight as 128 lbs.
Review of the resident's care plan, dated 1/17/24, showed:
-Resident has an ADL self-care performance deficit related to impaired balance and limited mobility;
-Resident is incontinent of bowel and bladder;
--Resident to be checked every 2 hours and as needed for incontinent every shift;
--The resident required a skin inspection daily;
-The resident has chronic pain related to end stage kidney disease, dialysis, and left buttocks wound;
--Administer analgesic as needed for pain, give 1/2 hour before treatment or care;
--Anticipate the resident's need for pain relief and respond immediately to any complaints of pain;
--Evaluate the effectiveness of pain interventions daily and every shift;
--Monitor probable cause of each pain episode;
--Monitor and report to the nurse any signs and symptoms of non-verbal pain;
-The resident has actual impairment to skin integrity of the left buttock related to wound;
--Check the resident's skin daily while providing cares to the resident and notify the nurse of any areas of skin break down;
--Monitor and document location, size and treatment of skin injury, report failure to heal or signs and symptoms of infection to the physician;
--Resident to be turned or repositioned every 2 hours when in bed and in chair;
--Ensure resident is not laying on left buttocks wound, use pillows to shift resident's weight and prevent further skin breakdown;
--Resident needs pressure relieving/reducing device while up in chair;
--Resident needs pressure relieving/reducing mattress while in bed;
--Weekly skin assessments to be done by nurse, observe, measure, document and report any areas of skin break down and current wound status to provider for treatment orders if required.
Review of the resident's Physician's Order Sheet (POS) for January 2024 showed:
-admission date of 11/30/23;
-Start date: 11/30/23 - no end date, assess pain every shift;
-Start date: 11/30/23 - no end date, barrier cream to peri area, buttocks, and sacral coccyx after each incontinent episode;
-Start date: 12/1/23 - no end date, flush wound left buttocks with wound cleanser, loosely pack Aqua Ag ribbon into the wound and secure with Tegaderm or wound vac drape. Change daily and as needed for soilage/drainage, one time a day for wound left buttock;
-Start date: 11/30/23 - no end date, implement wound care protocol as necessary
-Start date: 11/30/23 - no end date, pain management, obtain consult and treatment as needed for patient health and comfort;
-Start date: 12/1/23 - no end date, weekly skin assessment every Friday;
-Start date: 11/30/23 - no end date, Acetaminophen tablet, 500 mg, give one tablet by mouth every 4 hours as needed for pain;
-No order for a loss air mattress;
-No order to turn the resident every two hours;
-No order to ensure the resident was not in a chair for more than two hours at a time;
-No order to see the wound care clinic.
Review of the resident's Medication Administration Record (MAR), dated January 2024, showed:
-Order start date: 11/30/23 - no end date, Acetaminophen tablet 500 mg, give one tablet by mouth every 4 hours as needed for pain;
--The resident received one tablet of Acetaminophen 500 mg on 1/17/24 at 12:30 A.M., with a pain level of 5 on a 0 - 10 pain scale;
--The resident received one tablet of Acetaminophen 500 mg, on 1/17/24 at 7:31 P.M., with a pain level of 2;
-No other entries the resident received Acetaminophen;
-Order start date: 11/30/23 - no end date, assess pain every shift;
-1/1/24 through 1/24/24, the resident's pain rating was assessed at 0 (indicating no pain) on the day shift and the night shift.
Review of the resident's medical record dated, 11/30/23 - 1/24/24, showed no documentation the resident went to his/her wound clinic appointment on 1/2/24 or that the wound care clinic was contacted or followed the resident as ordered.
During an interview on 1/25/24 02:05 P.M., wound clinic staff said:
-He/she usually speaks with the transportation supervisor regarding appointments at the facility;
-Someone from the nursing home called on 12/13/24 at 2:44 P.M., to cancel the resident's appointment.
During an interview on 1/25/24, at 2:45 P.M., the transportation supervisor said:
-He/she was not aware of any wound clinic appointment for the resident;
-He/she had not taken the resident to any wound clinic appointment.
During an interview on 1/25/24 at 3:16 P.M., the wound care physician said:
-The facility staff canceled the resident's wound clinic follow up appointment scheduled for 1/2/24;
-The facility staff told the wound physician the resident's wound would be taken care of in-house;
-Someone from the facility called on 12/13/24 at 2:44 P.M., to cancel the resident's appointment;
-The office usually talks to the transportation supervisor when scheduling or canceling appointments.
Review of the resident's Treatment Administration Record (TAR) dated, January 2024, showed 1/1/24 through 1/23/24 the resident's wound was treated daily.
Observation and interview on 1/23/24 at 7:26 P.M., showed:
-The resident's low air loss mattress was set to 300 lbs (pounds);
-Certified Nurse Aide (CNA) B and Nurse Aide (NA) A transferred the resident to the bed with the mechanical lift;
-CNA B removed the resident's brief and provided perineal care;
-CNA B and NA A positioned the resident on his/her left side;
-A half dollar size open wound was observed on the resident's left ischium;
-There was no dressing covering the wound. The dressing was not in the brief, in the trash, or on the resident's floor;
-The wound was draining a penny size amount yellow/green drainage. The wound edges were macerated and undefined. The wound bed was cream colored with a thin black border, and no odor was present;
-CNA B washed his/her hands and applied clean gloves. CNA B took a wipe and wiped down the resident's buttocks towards the rectum, wiping feces into the wound and left the wipe soiled with feces laying at the opening of the wound;
-CNA B and NA A did not apply barrier cream;
-CNA B and NA A said they do not apply barrier cream;
-CNA B said the resident had the wound since he/she was admitted ;
-NA A said he/she had been working at the facility a few weeks and the resident had the wound since he/she started working;
-CNA B said only the nurses do anything with the resident's wounds;
-CNA B said he/she was not sure if the wound should be covered or not, but he/she would tell the nurse;
-NA A said he/she did not do anything with the low air loss mattress settings;
-CNA B said he/she did not know what the settings should be, the nurses set the low air loss mattress settings.
Observation and interview on 1/23/24 at 7:45 P.M., showed:
-CNA A told Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN) A the resident needed a new dressing applied;
-CNA A did not tell the nurse which dressing needed changed;
-The LPN A removed the blanket from the resident down to his/her upper abdomen;
-The nurse looked at the PICC line dressing on the resident's left chest;
-The nurse did not look at the wound on the resident's left ischium;
-The nurse said there were no other dressings that needed to be changed today;
-The nurse said he/she had been gone and just returned to the facility today and usually does not work this hall;
-LPN A said the mattress settings are set at the time the mattress was set up and he/she did not know who set up the mattress or what the settings should be.
Continuous observation on 1/24/24 at 7:03 A.M. until 1/24/24 at 4:30 P.M., showed:
-7:03 A.M.- 7:45 A.M., the resident sat in his/her wheelchair in the dining room eating and looking out the window. The resident had a cushion in his/her wheelchair;
-7:45 A.M., the resident continued to sit in his/her wheelchair in the dining room and propelled himself/herself away from the table and stopped approximately one foot away from the table;
-7:45 A.M. - 8:09 A.M., the resident sit in his/her wheelchair in the dining room;
-8:09 A.M., the resident continued to sit in his/her wheelchair, he/she waved his/her hands in the air and said he/she was ready to lay down;
-8:12 A.M., the resident told NA B please lay me down, I am done;
-8:17 A.M. - 8:21 A.M., the resident continued to sit in his/her wheelchair, waving his/her hands in the air and saying he/she was ready to lay down;
-8:21 A.M., NA B took the resident back to his/her room in his/her wheelchair;
-8:22 A.M., NA B positioned the resident's wheelchair beside the bed with the resident facing the hall and NA B set a bedside table in front of the resident, placed the call light on the table, and turned a movie on.
-8:23 A.M., NA B left the resident's room;
-8:23 A.M. until 10:01 A.M., the resident continued to sit in his/her wheelchair in his/her room;
-10:01 A.M. - 10:05 A.M., the resident continued to sit in his/her wheelchair in his/her room coloring. LPN D stopped at the resident's door and asked if the resident wanted to lay down or stay up and color. The resident told LPN D he/she wanted to stay up and color. LPN D did not offer to reposition the resident in his/her wheelchair, offer incontinent care, or assess the resident for pain.
-10:05 A.M. - 10:24 A.M., the resident continued to sit in his/her wheelchair in his/her room coloring;
-10: 25 A.M. - 10:44 A.M., the resident continued to sit in his/her wheelchair in his/her room coloring. The resident was leaning to the right, raising his/her bottom up off the seat of the wheelchair;
-10:44 A.M. - 10:45 A.M., the resident was leaning to the right with his/her hands on the arms of the wheelchair, raising his/her bottom up off the seat of the wheelchair. Housekeeper A looked in the resident's room while the resident had facial grimacing and was saying ow, ow, that is sore; Housekeeper A did not tell the nursing staff the resident was complaining of pain;
-10:46 -10:50 A.M., the resident is continued leaning to the right with his/her hands on the arms of the wheelchair, raising his/her bottom up off the seat;
-10:50 A.M. - 11:30 A.M., the resident continued in his/her wheelchair looking around and coloring in his/her room. Staff had not repositioned, offered to change, or assessed him/her for pain;
-11:30 A.M., CNA G propelled the resident to the dining room table and handed the resident his/her crayons and coloring pages. The CNA did not offer to toilet or reposition the resident;
-From 11:30 A.M.- 11:49 A.M., the resident sat in the dining room in his/her wheelchair coloring.
-11:49 A.M. -11:55 A.M., the resident continued to sit in his/her wheelchair coloring. Multiple staff walked around the dining room. Staff did not offer toileting or any positioning assistance to the resident.
-11:55 A.M., an unidentified kitchen aide stopped and talked to the resident and walked away. The resident continued to sit in his/her wheelchair. Staff did not reposition the resident, check the resident for incontinence, or assess the resident for pain;
-11:56 A.M. - 12:03 P.M., the resident continued to sit in his/her wheelchair at the dining room table looking out the window;
-12:04 P.M. - 12:08 P.M., the resident continued to sit at the dining room table in his/her wheelchair with his/her position unchanged. The resident looked around the dining room, he/she used his/her arms to push against the wheelchair arms to lift their left side off of wheelchair. The resident had facial grimacing.
-12:09 P.M. -12:20 P.M., the resident continued in the same position without staff assistance and staff walked by passing out lunch trays. The resident had occasional facial grimacing;
-12:21 P.M.-12:28 P.M., the resident was in the dining room in his/her wheelchair. CNA F came into the dining room and patted the resident on the back and did not offer to reposition or toilet the resident. The resident continued to have occasional facial grimacing and lifted his/her left buttock off of the wheelchair cushion;
-12:28 P.M., the resident received his/her lunch tray, an unidentified dining room assistant sat down next to the resident and moved his/her coloring sheet. Staff did not offer to position or provide toileting assistance to the resident.
-12:28 P.M. - 12:53 P.M., the resident ate his/her pureed food and no staff offered to toilet or reposition resident;
-12:53 P.M. - 1:00 P.M., the resident continued at the dining room table trying to lift himself/herself up in the chair and said, it hurts. Observation showed staff were in the dining room passing trays.
-1:00 P.M. -1:05 P.M., the resident continued in the dining room in his/her wheelchair. CNA F asked the resident if he/she was doing ok and the resident said yes.
-1:05 P.M. - 1:19 P.M., the resident continued to eat his/her lunch in dining room. Staff did not reposition or toilet the resident;
-1:20 P.M., the resident tried to push his/her plate away from him/her. CNA F stopped and assisted the resident in moving his/her plate and helped the resident get his/her crayons. The CNA did not offer assistance with toileting or positioning.
-1:20 P.M., - 1:40 P.M., the resident continued to sit at the dining room table in his/her wheelchair looking around. The resident continued to say he/she needed someone to push him/her, that he/she had pain, and he/she had a sore on his/her buttock. The resident had facial grimacing. CNA G and CNA F passed back and forth through the dining room.
-1:40 P.M. - 1:46 P.M., the surveyor reported to CNA G, CNA F, and the Director of Nursing (DON) the resident was asking to be taken back to his/her room. CNA G went to the resident and came back and said the resident wants to stay for bingo;
-1:46 P.M., CNA G moved the resident to another table for bingo. CNA G did not provide incontinent care or reposition the resident;
-1:46 P.M. - 1:50 P.M., the resident sat in his/her wheelchair in the dining room and waited for bingo to start.
-1:50 P.M. - 2:00 P.M., the resident continued in his/her wheelchair trying to push his/herself up off the wheelchair. The resident had facial grimacing and said ow. Multiple staff walked by the resident and did not provide assistance;
-2:00 P.M. - 2:25 P.M., the resident continued to sit in his/her wheelchair in the dining room playing bingo and looking around. The resident had facial grimacing and repeatedly said my butt is sore, and ow, ow;
-2:25 P.M.-2:28 P.M., CNA G walked over to the resident at the dining room table during bingo asked the resident if he/she needed changed and checked the resident's brief. The CNA told the resident he/she was fine. Staff did not reposition the resident;
-2:28 P.M. - 2:40 P.M., the resident continued to sit in his/her wheelchair in the dining room with facial grimacing and saying ouch, using his/her arms to push himself/herself up off of the wheelchair with wheelchair arms.
-2:40 P.M., the resident said he/she cannot keep off of his/her buttock, his/her buttock was sore and hurts. The resident continued to have facial grimacing and said ow multiple times;
-2:41 P.M. - 3:05 P.M., the resident remained at the dining room table in his/her wheelchair playing bingo. Staff did not offer to reposition or provide toileting assistance;
-3:06 P.M. - 3:20 P.M., multiple staff walked by the resident without offering to take the resident to his/her room, reposition, or provide toileting assistance, after bingo. The resident continued to have facial grimacing and said ow multiple times;
-3:21 P.M., the resident said, somebody help me. Staff were passing out prizes to residents for bingo. No staff assisted the resident.
-3:26 P.M., the activity aide asked the resident what was wrong after the resident said ouch. The resident told the staff that his/her bottom was sore;
- 3:27 P.M. - 3:34 P.M., the resident continued to sit in his/her wheelchair and complain of his/her buttocks hurting with facial grimacing;
-3:35 P.M., the hospitality aide said he/she told the charge nurse the resident needs situated, and the nurse should be to the dining room soon. The resident remained in the dining room with position unchanged and no staff assistance;
-3:42 P.M. -3:44 P.M., the resident used his/her arms to propel himself/herself slowly away from the dining room table;
-3:44 P.M. -3:46 P.M., the resident waved down the Social Services Director (SSD) and the SSD propelled the resident around the halls and into his/her room. The SSD left the resident in his/her room and did not tell staff the resident was back in his/her room.
-3:46 P.M. - 4:00 P.M., the resident sat in his/her room in his/her wheelchair leaning to the right side, he/she pushed himself/herself off of the wheelchair cushion. The resident had facial grimacing and said, my butt hurts. There was no staff around.
-4:00 P.M. - 4:06 P.M., the resident reached for the call light on the bedside table and dropped the call light on the floor. The resident reached for the call light, but could not pick it up;
-4:06 P.M., the DON walked to the door of the resident's room and spoke to the resident. The DON did not offer to reposition, toilet, or assess the resident for pain;
-4:07 P.M. - 4:19 P.M. the resident continued to sit in his/her wheelchair next to his/her bed and continued to have facial grimacing.
-4:20 P.M., the surveyor asked the CNAs to lay the resident down to see the resident's skin. CNA A and NA B transferred the resident to his/her bed with the mechanical lift. The resident's wheelchair had a white foam cushion with a plastic trash bag covering the cushion. CNA A and CNA B removed the resident's mechanical lift pad, pants, and brief. The resident's brief had a strong ammonia odor and adhesive border gauze dressing with a large amount of yellow/green thick drainage in the brief. The wound on the resident's left ischium was red and had yellow/green thick drainage coming from it. CNA A went to get the nurse.
-4:30 P.M., LPN D came into the resident's room with gloved hands, holding a bottle of wound cleanser in one hand and an adhesive border gauze dressing and calcium alginate pad (absorbent non-adherent dressing) in the other hand. The LPN set the wound cleanser and dressing on the resident's mattress. The CNAs rolled the resident to his/her left side. No dressing was on the resident's wound and the wound was red and had yellow/green, thick drainage. The LPN sprayed the wound with wound cleanser and wiped the outer edges of the wound with 2x2 gauze. With the same gloves, the LPN used his/her index finger and pushed the calcium alginate into the wound bed and covered the wound with adhesive border gauze and initialed the dressing. The resident said, "
SERIOUS
(G)
Actual Harm - a resident was hurt due to facility failures
Deficiency F0697
(Tag F0697)
A resident was harmed · This affected 1 resident
Based on observation, interview, and record review, the facility failed to address pain for one resident (Resident #322) who had a pressure ulcer to the left buttocks, impaired mobility, and was depen...
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Based on observation, interview, and record review, the facility failed to address pain for one resident (Resident #322) who had a pressure ulcer to the left buttocks, impaired mobility, and was dependent on staff for all activities of daily living. The facility staff failed to assess the resident's pain and document the resident's pain when the resident voiced pain, and failed to administer pain medication to the resident. The resident repeatedly stated, my butt sore and ow, with facial grimacing. The facility census was 72.
Review of the facility's Pain Assessment and Management policy, revised March 2020, showed:
-Procedure is used to help the staff identify pain in the resident;
-Possible behavioral signs of pain are, verbal expressions such as groaning or crying, facial grimacing, guarding, or favoring a part of the body;
-Identifying the causes of pain such as pressure, venous, or arterial ulcers;
-Review the resident's treatment record to identify any situations where an increase in the resident's pain may be anticipated, for example; treatments such as wound care or dressing changes and repositioning;
-Document the resident's reported pain level with adequate detail.
Review of the facility's Wound Care policy, revised, October 2010, showed:
-Review the resident's care plan for orders for pain medication as needed to be administered prior to wound care.
Review of the facility's Repositioning policy, revised May 2013, showed:
-The purpose of this policy is to provide guidelines for the evaluation of resident repositioning needs, to promote comfort for all bed or chair bound residents and to prevent skin breakdown and provide pressure relief for residents;
-Review the resident's care plan to evaluate for any special needs of the resident;
-Repositioning is a common, effective intervention for preventing skin breakdown and providing pressure relief;
-Repositioning is critical for a resident who is dependent upon staff for repositioning;
-Residents with a stage I pressure ulcer or above pressure ulcer, every two hour repositioning schedule is inadequate;
-Residents who are in a chair should be on every one hour schedule;
-The position in which the resident was placed should be documented.
Review of Resident #322's admission Minimum Data Set (MDS), a federally mandated assessment instrument completed by facility staff, dated 12/6/23, showed:
-Moderate cognitive impairment;
-Dependent on staff for Activities of Daily Living (ADLs);
-Dependent on staff for turning and repositioning;
-Pressure reliving devices in chair and bed;
-At risk for pressure ulcers;
-One unhealed pressure area; Stage 3;
-Uses non-verbal, vocal complaints and facial grimacing as indicator of pain;
-Pain observed 1 to 2 days out the last 5 days;
-Incontinent of bowel and bladder;
-Used a wheelchair;
-Dependent on staff for mobility:
-Diagnosis included: osteomyelitis (a serious infection of the bone), end stage kidney disease, non-pressure chronic ulcer of back, Down Syndrome (a genetic chromosomal disorder that can a cause causing lifelong intellectual disability and developmental delays), diabetes mellitus (a metabolic disease, involving inappropriately elevated blood glucose levels), and peripheral vascular disease (progressive circulation disorder caused by narrowing, blockage or spasms in a blood vessel).
Review of the resident's care plan, dated 1/17/24, showed:
-Resident has an ADL self-care performance deficit related to impaired balance and limited mobility;
-Resident is incontinent of bowel and bladder and dependent on staff to clean and reposition.
-The resident has pressure sores and high risk for skin breakdown and pain is to be monitored.
-The resident has chronic pain related to end stage kidney disease, dialysis, and left buttocks wound;
-Administer analgesic as needed for pain, give 1/2 hour before treatment or care;
-Anticipate the resident's need for pain relief and respond immediately to any complaints of pain;
-Evaluate the effectiveness of pain interventions daily and every shift;
-Monitor probable cause of each pain episode;
-Monitor and report to the nurse any signs and symptoms of non-verbal pain
-Resident to be turned or repositioned every 2 hours when in bed and in chair;
-Staff to ensure resident was not laying on left buttocks wound, use pillows to shift resident's weight and prevent further skin breakdown.
Review of the resident's Physician's Order Sheet (POS) for January 2024 showed:
-admission date of 11/30/23;
-Start date: 11/30/23 - no end date, assess pain every shift;
-Start date: 11/30/23 - no end date, pain management, obtain consult and treatment as needed for patient health and comfort;
-Start date: 11/30/23 - no end date, Acetaminophen tablet, 500 milligrams (mg), give one tablet by mouth every 4 hours as needed for pain.
Review of the resident's Medication Administration Record (MAR) dated January 2024, showed:
-Order start date: 11/30/23 - no end date, Acetaminophen tablet 500 mg, give one tablet by mouth every 4 hours as needed for pain;
--The resident received one tablet of Acetaminophen 500 mg on 1/17/24 at 12:30 A.M., with a pain level of 5 on a 0 - 10 pain scale;
--The resident received one tablet of Acetaminophen 500 mg, on 1/17/24 at 7:31 P.M., with a pain level of 2;
--No other entries that the resident received Acetaminophen were found;
-Order start date: 11/30/23 - no end date, assess pain every shift;
--1/1/24 through 1/24/24 the resident's pain rating was assessed at 0 (indicating no pain) on the day shift and the night shift.
Review of the resident's progress notes dated 1/1/24 through 1/24/24 showed no documentation the resident was in pain.
Continuous observation on 1/24/24 at 7:03 A.M. until 1/24/24 at 4:20 P.M., showed:
-7:03 A.M.- 8:21 A.M., the resident sat in his/her wheelchair in the dining room eating and looking out the window. The resident had a cushion in his/her wheelchair. At 8:12 A.M. the resident told Nurse Aide (NA) B, please lay me down, I am done. The resident continued to sit in his/her wheelchair in the dining room saying he/she was ready to lay down;
-8:22 A.M., NA B positioned the resident's wheelchair beside the bed in the resident's room with the resident facing the hall and set a bedside table in front of the resident, placed the call light on the table, and turned a movie on.
-8:23 A.M., NA B left the resident's room;
-8:23 A.M.- 10:01 A.M., the resident continued to sit in his/her wheelchair in his/her room and color.
-10:01 A.M. - 10:05 A.M., the resident continued to sit in his/her wheelchair in his/her room coloring. Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN) D stopped at the resident's door and asked if the resident wanted to lay down or stay up and color. The resident told LPN D he/she wanted to stay up and color. LPN D did not offer to reposition the resident in his/her wheelchair, offer incontinent care, or assess the resident for pain.
-10:05 A.M. - 10:24 A.M., the resident continued to sit in his/her wheelchair in his/her room coloring;
-10:25 A.M. - 10:44 A.M., the resident continued to sit in his/her wheelchair in his/her room coloring. The resident was leaning to the right, raising his/her bottom up off the seat of the wheelchair;
-10:44 A.M. - 10:45 A.M., the resident was leaning to the right with his/her hands on the arms of the wheelchair, raising his/her bottom up off the seat of the wheelchair. Housekeeper A looked in the resident's room while the resident had facial grimacing and was saying ow, ow, that is sore; Housekeeper A did not tell the nursing staff the resident was complaining of pain;
-10:46 -10:55 A.M., the resident continued to lean to the right with his/her hands on the arms of the wheelchair, raising his/her bottom up off the seat of the wheelchair;
-10:55 A.M. - 11:00 A.M., the resident continued in his/her wheelchair, in his/her room looking around the room., no staff repositioned him/her or assessed him/her for pain;
-11:00 A.M. - 11:30 A.M., the resident continued to sit in his/her wheelchair in his/her room and was leaning to the right, raising his/her bottom up off the seat of the wheelchair while the resident had facial grimacing and said ow, ow, my butt is sore. No staff repositioned or assessed the resident for pain;
-11:30 A.M., Certified Nurse Aide (CNA) G propelled the resident to the dining room table and handed the resident his/her crayons and coloring pages. The CNA did not offer to toilet or reposition the resident;
-From 11:30 A.M. - 11:49 A.M., the resident sat in the dining room in his/her wheelchair and colored;
-11:50 A.M. - 11:55 A.M., the resident continued to sit in his/her wheelchair and color. Multiple staff walked around the dining room. Staff did not offer toileting or any positioning assistance to the resident.
-11:55 A.M., an unidentified kitchen aide stopped and talked to the resident and walked away. The resident continued to sit in his/her wheelchair. Staff did not reposition the resident or assess the resident for pain;
-11:56 A.M. - 12:03 P.M., the resident continued to sit in his/her wheelchair at the dining room table looking out the window;
-12:04 P.M. - 12:08 P.M., the resident continued to sit at the dining room table in his/her wheelchair with his/her position unchanged. The resident looked around the dining room, he/she used his/her arms to push against the wheelchair arms to lift his/her left side off the wheelchair. The resident had facial grimacing;
-12:09 P.M. - 12:20 P.M., the resident continued in the same position without staff assistance. Staff walked by passing out lunch trays. The resident had occasional facial grimacing;
-12:21 P.M.- 12:28 P.M., the resident remained in the dining room in his/her wheelchair. CNA F came into the dining room and patted the resident on the back and did not offer to reposition the resident. The resident continued to have occasional facial grimacing and lifted his/her left buttock off the wheelchair cushion;
-12:28 P.M., the resident received his/her lunch tray, an unidentified dining room assistant sat down next to the resident and moved his/her coloring sheet back. Staff did not offer to reposition the resident;
-12:29 P.M. - 12:53 P.M., the resident ate his/her food and no staff offered to reposition resident;
-12:53 P.M. - 1:00 P.M., the resident continued at the dining room table trying to lift himself/herself up in the chair and said it hurts. Staff were in the dining room passing trays.
-1:00 P.M. - 1:05 P.M., the resident continued in the dining room in his/her wheelchair. CNA F asked the resident if he/she was doing ok and the resident said yes. Staff did not reposition the resident;
-1:05 P.M. - 1:19 P.M., the resident continued to eat his/her lunch in dining room. Staff did not reposition the resident;
-1:20 P.M., the resident tried to push his/her plate away from him/her. CNA F stopped and assisted the resident in moving his/her plate and helped the resident get his/her crayons. CNA F did not offer assistance with repositioning;
-1:20 P.M. - 1:40 P.M., the resident continued to sit at the dining room table in his/her wheelchair looking around. The resident continued to say he/she needed someone to push him/her, that he/she had pain, and he/she had a sore on his/her buttock. The resident had facial grimacing. CNA G and CNA F passed back and forth through the dining room;
-1:40 P.M. - 1:46 P.M., the surveyor reported to CNA G, CNA F, and the Director of Nursing (DON) the resident was asking to be taken back to his/her room. CNA G went to the resident and came back and said the resident wants to stay for bingo;
-1:46 P.M., CNA G moved the resident to another table for bingo. CNA G did reposition the resident;
-1:46 P.M. - 1:50 P.M., the resident sat in his/her wheelchair in the dining room and waited for bingo to start.
-1:50 P.M. - 2:00 P.M., the resident continued in his/her wheelchair trying to push himself/herself up off the wheelchair. The resident had facial grimacing and said ow. Multiple staff walked by the resident and did not provide assistance to the resident;
-2:00 P.M. - 2:25 P.M., the resident continued to sit in his/her wheelchair in the dining room playing bingo. The resident had facial grimacing and repeatedly said, my butt is sore, and ow, ow;
-2:25 P.M.- 2:28 P.M., CNA G walked over to the resident at the dining room table during bingo asked the resident if he/she needed changed and checked the resident's brief. CNA G told the resident he/she was fine. Staff did not reposition the resident;
-2:28 P.M. - 2:40 P.M., the resident continued to sit in his/her wheelchair in the dining room with facial grimacing and saying ouch, using his/her arms to push himself/herself up off of the wheelchair using the wheelchair arms;
-2:40 P.M., the resident said he/she cannot keep off of his/her buttock, his/her buttock was sore and hurts. The resident continued to have facial grimacing and said ow multiple times;
-2:41 P.M. - 3:05 P.M., the resident remained at the dining room table in his/her wheelchair playing bingo. Staff did not offer to reposition;
-3:06 P.M. - 3:20 P.M., multiple staff walked by the resident without offering to take the resident to his/her room or reposition, after bingo was over. The resident continued to have facial grimacing and said ow multiple times;
-3:21 P.M., the resident said, Somebody help me. Staff were passing out prizes to residents for bingo. No staff assisted the resident.
-3:26 P.M., the Activity Aide asked the resident what was wrong after the resident said ouch. The resident told the staff that his/her bottom was sore;
- 3:27 P.M. - 3:34 P.M., the resident continued to sit in his/her wheelchair and complain of his/her buttocks hurting with facial grimacing;
-3:35 P.M., the hospitality aide said he/she told the charge nurse the resident needs situated and the nurse should be to the dining room soon. The resident remained in the dining room with position unchanged and no staff assistance;
-3:42 P.M. - 3:44 P.M., the resident used his/her arms to propel himself/herself slowly away from the dining room table;
-3:44 P.M. - 3:46 P.M., the resident waved down the Social Services Director (SSD) and the SSD propelled the resident around the halls and to his/her room. The SSD left the resident in his/her room and did not tell staff the resident was back in his/her room.
-3:46 P.M. - 4:00 P.M., the resident sat in his/her room in his/her wheelchair leaning to the right side. He/she pushed himself/herself off the wheelchair cushion. The resident had facial grimacing and said, my butt hurts.
-4:00 P.M. - 4:06 P.M., the resident reached for the call light on the bedside table and dropped the call light on the floor. The resident reached for the call light, but could not pick it up;
-4:06 P.M., the DON walked to the door of the resident's room and spoke to the resident. The DON did not pick up the call light off the floor, offer to reposition the resident, or assess the resident for pain;
-4:07 P.M.- 4:19 P.M., the resident continued to sit in his/her wheelchair next to his/her bed. The resident continued to have facial grimacing;
-4:20 P.M., the surveyor asked the CNAs to lay the resident down to see the resident's skin. CNA A and NA B transferred the resident to his/her bed with the mechanical lift. The resident's wheelchair had a white foam cushion with a plastic trash bad covering the cushion. CNA A and CNA B removed the resident's mechanical lift pad, pants, and brief. The resident's brief had a strong ammonia odor and adhesive border gauze dressing with a large amount of yellow/green thick drainage. CNA A went to get the nurse. The resident had facial grimacing and said ow.
-4:30 P.M., showed LPN D came into the resident's room with gloved hands. The CNA's rolled the resident to his/her left side. The LPN provided the resident's wound treatment. The resident said, that hurts and showed facial grimacing. The LPN said the resident has had this wound for years and is deeply tunneled. The dressings are completed daily, and the wound is unstageable. The resident was admitted with the wound.
Review of the resident MAR, dated January 2024, showed no pain medications were given on 1/24/24.
During an interview on 1/24/24 at 4:45 P.M., CNA A and NA B said they provide repositioning and toileting assistance to the resident when they get time. They normally start doing rounds at the beginning of their shift and the standard is every two hours.
During an interview on 1/24/24 at 5:10 P.M., LPN D said:
-None of the staff told him/her the resident was in pain;
-He/she did not assess the resident for pain today;
-He/she did not give the resident any medication for pain today;
-The resident should be repositioned every two hours, because of his/her wound and pain;
-If the resident says that he/she hurts, wants to lay down, or shows facial grimacing the nurse should be notified.
During an interview on 1/24/24 at 5:41 P.M., NA B said:
-The resident had a sore on his/her bottom;
-He/she complained that his/her bottom hurts. That was why he/she sets on a cushion;
-It was normal for the resident to say ow and my butt hurts, that is what he/she does;
-The resident likes to stay up in his/her chair and watch movies;
-If the resident says his/her bottom hurts, he/she gets the nurse and the nurse will give the resident something for pain;
-The resident should be checked and repositioned every two hours;
-The resident will usually tell them if he/she wants to lay down.
During an interview on 1/24/24 at 5:45 P.M., CNA G said:
-The resident had a sore on his/her bottom;
-When he/she complains that his/her bottom hurts, he/she gets the nurse and the staff lay him/her down;
-The resident wanted to stay up and play bingo today that was why he/she was not laid down;
-If the resident says his/her bottom hurts, he/she gets the nurse and the nurse will give him/her something for pain;
-He/she said if the resident says ouch or something hurts, he/she would tell the nurse should address the pain;
-It was normal for the resident to say ow and my butt hurts, that is what he/she does.
During an interview on 1/25/24 at 5:31 A.M., LPN A said:
-He/she did not give the resident any pain medication last night (1/24/24) prior to wound care as directed by the care plan.
During an interview on 1/24/24 at 5:51 P.M., CNA F said:
-The resident should be repositioned at least every two hours;
-If the resident says he/she hurts, the staff tell the nurse.
During an interview on 1/24/24 at 6:07 P.M., the SSD said:
-If the resident says he/she is in pain or wants to lay down, he/she gets the nursing staff to lay him/her down;
-If the resident shows facial grimacing or moaning, staff should tell the nurse;
-The resident should be repositioned at least every two hours;
-If the resident says he/she hurts, he/she would tell the nurse.
During an interview on 1/25/24 at 6:07 A.M., Housekeeper A said:
-If the resident said ouch or showed facial expressions of pain that means the resident is in pain and he/she should tell the nurse;
-He/she did not see the resident in pain on 1/24/24.
During an interview on 1/25/24 at 6:24 A.M., Certified Medication Technician (CMT) A said:
-The resident did not receive scheduled pain medication;
-The resident had an order for Tylenol for as needed pain;
-The resident did not ask for pain medication;
-He/she would look for facial expressions and verbal expression for pain and he/she should tell the nurse;
-He/she did not remember the resident being in pain at any time he/she has worked.
During an interview on 1/25/24 at 3:16 P.M., the wound care physician said:
-He/she expected the resident's pain to be controlled even if it is giving the resident just a Tylenol 30 minutes before wound care and any time he/she is having pain.
During an interview on 1/25/24 at 4:18 P.M., Family Member A said:
-The resident has more pain when he/she does not change positions or if he/she is up too long;
-He/she would not expect the resident to be up in his/her wheelchair all day long.
During an interview on 1/26/24 at 8:16 A.M., Physician A said:
- If a resident is in pain it should be assessed by a nurse and the appropriate action taken whether it is medication or non-pharmlogical interventions;
-If staff notice a resident is in pain they should tell the nurse and if they are a nurse they should administer prescribed pain mediation;
-The pain should be addressed as soon as possible.
During interviews on 1/26/24 at 9:16 A.M. and 1/27/24 at 12:45 P.M., the DON said:
-He/she would expect staff to report to the nurse if the resident said his/her butt hurts;
-The staff should not let the resident continue to voice complaints of pain, without interventions for an extended period of time;
-It is not acceptable for the CNAs to respond to the resident's facial grimacing and reports of pain by not reporting this to the nurse.
-He/she expected CNAs to report pain to the charge nurse;
-Staff should document the resident's pain on the MAR.
During interviews on 1/26/24 at 9:20 A.M. and 1/27/24 at 12:50 P.M., the Administrator said:
-He/she would expect staff to report to the nurse if the resident said his/her butt hurts;
-He/she expected CNAs to report pain to the charge nurse.
-The staff should not let the resident continue to voice complaints of pain, without interventions for an extended period of time;
-It is not acceptable for the CNAs to respond to the resident's facial grimacing and reports of pain by not reporting this to the nurse.
CONCERN
(D)
Potential for Harm - no one hurt, but risky conditions existed
Resident Rights
(Tag F0550)
Could have caused harm · This affected 1 resident
**NOTE- TERMS IN BRACKETS HAVE BEEN EDITED TO PROTECT CONFIDENTIALITY** 2. Review of Resident #322's admission MDS, dated [DATE], showed:
-Moderate cognitive impairment;
-Dependent on staff for ADLs;
...
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**NOTE- TERMS IN BRACKETS HAVE BEEN EDITED TO PROTECT CONFIDENTIALITY** 2. Review of Resident #322's admission MDS, dated [DATE], showed:
-Moderate cognitive impairment;
-Dependent on staff for ADLs;
-Dependent on staff for turning and repositioning;
-Always incontinent of bowel and bladder;
-Used a wheelchair;
-Dependent on staff for mobility:
-Diagnosis included, non-pressure chronic ulcer of back and Down Syndrome (a genetic chromosomal disorder that can a cause causing lifelong intellectual disability and developmental delays).
Review of the resident's care plan, dated 1/17/24, showed:
-Resident has ADL self-care performance deficit related to impaired balance and limited mobility;
-Resident is incontinent of bowel and bladder;
-Resident is to be checked every 2 hours and as needed for incontinence every shift.
Observation on 1/24/24 at 1:40 P.M., showed:
-The resident was sitting at the table with the hospitality aide;
-Other residents were sitting in the dining room;
-CNA G came to where the resident was sitting and asked the resident if he/she needed changed;
-The CNA pulled the waist band of his/her pants out.
-The resident told CNA G no.
During an interview on 1/24/24 at 2:05 P.M., CNA G said:
-He/she did not think he/she was speaking loud enough for others to hear;
-He/she should have taken the resident to a private location.
During an interview on 1/27/24 at 12:45 P.M., the Administrator said:
-Staff should take a resident to a private location to check to see if they needed incontinent care.
Based on observations, interviews, and record review, the facility failed to ensure staff treated one of 18 sampled residents (Resident #38) in a manner that maintained their dignity when staff did not respond to Resident #38's call light in a timely manner and when staff checked Resident #322's incontinent brief while the resident was in the dining room. The facility census was 72.
Review of the facility's policy for dignity, revised February 2021, showed, in part:
- Each resident shall be cared for in a manner that promotes and enhances his/her sense of well-being, level of satisfaction with life, and feelings of self-worth and self-esteem;
- Residents are treated with dignity and respect at all times;
- The facility culture supports dignity and respect for residents by honoring resident goals, choices, preferences, values and beliefs. This begins with the initial admission and continues throughout the resident's facility stay;
- Individual needs and preferences of the resident are identified through the assessment process;
- Demeaning practices and standards of care that compromise dignity are prohibited. Staff are expected to promote dignity and assist residents, for example: promptly responding to a resident's request for toileting assistance;
- Staff are expected to treat cognitively impaired residents with dignity and sensitivity, for example: addressing the underlying motives or root causes for behavior.
Review of the facility's policy for answering the call light, revised March 2021, showed, in part:
- The purpose of this procedure is to ensure timely responses to the resident's requests and needs.
1. Review of Resident #38's care plan, revised 12/26/23, showed:
- The resident had an activities of daily living (ADL) self-care performance deficit related to limited mobility;
- The resident required the assistance of one to two staff for toileting.
Review of the resident's admission Minimum Data Set (MDS), a federally mandated assessment instrument completed by facility staff, dated 12/28/23, showed:
- Cognitive skills intact;
- Dependent on the assistance of staff for toilet use;
- Always incontinent of urine;
- Occasionally incontinent of bowel;
- Diagnoses included: Stroke, hemiplegia (paralysis affecting one side of the body), and anxiety.
During an interview on 1/23/24 at 2:14 P.M., the resident said:
- He/She had been constipated and the staff gave him/her stool softeners and now he/she was having liquid stools;
- He/She had put his/her call light on at 1:45 P.M. because he/she needed to have his/her incontinent brief changed due to the loose stool;
- One staff member came in, shut the call light off and said he/she needed to get someone to assist him/her and left the room;
- Another staff member came in, shut the call light off and said he/she needed to go get wipes and left the room;
- The third staff member came in, shut the light off and said he/she needed to see what was going on and left the room;
- The resident was still waiting to be cleaned up.
- It made him/her very upset to wait so long to have his/her call light answered;
- He/She did not like it when the staff took so long to answer his/her call light and he/she was left soiled for so long.
Observation and interview on 1/23/24 showed:
- At 2:15 P.M., the resident put his/her call light on;
- At 2:16 P.M., a staff member came in, shut off the call light and said he/she needed to get wipes;
- At 2:19 P.M., two staff came in and provided incontinence care to the resident after he/she had waited 34 minutes.
During an interview on 1/29/24 at 4:09 P.M., Certified Nurse Aide (CNA) A said:
- He/she tried to answer the call lights as soon as they came on;
- 30 minutes would not be an acceptable time for a resident to wait to get cleaned up.
During an interview on 1/29/24 at 4:30 P.M., CNA B said:
- He/She tried to answer call lights as soon as he/she could and was not busy with another resident;
- A resident who was soiled should not have to wait 30 minutes to have peri care, it should be done as soon as possible.
During an interview on 1/27/24 at 12:45 P.M., the Administrator said:
- Her maximum time for call lights to get answered is 15 minutes and should not be going off any longer than that;
- She would expect staff to clean the resident up in less than 30 minutes.
CONCERN
(D)
Potential for Harm - no one hurt, but risky conditions existed
Deficiency F0645
(Tag F0645)
Could have caused harm · This affected 1 resident
**NOTE- TERMS IN BRACKETS HAVE BEEN EDITED TO PROTECT CONFIDENTIALITY** 2. Review of Resident #322's admission MDS, dated [DATE], showed:
-Moderate cognitive impairment;
-Diagnosis included, Down Synd...
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**NOTE- TERMS IN BRACKETS HAVE BEEN EDITED TO PROTECT CONFIDENTIALITY** 2. Review of Resident #322's admission MDS, dated [DATE], showed:
-Moderate cognitive impairment;
-Diagnosis included, Down Syndrome.
Review of the resident's record on showed the following:
- No documentation that a PASARR Level I or Level II had been completed.
During an interview on 1/25/24 at 10:03 A.M. the Administrator said Resident #322 should have had a PASARR Level I screening completed before the resident was admitted to the facility.
Based on interview and record review, the facility failed to ensure two out of 18 sampled residents who had a diagnosis of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) (Resident #18) and a a diagnosis of Down Syndrome (Resident #322) had a Preadmission Screening and Resident Review (PASARR) completed and reviewed by the facility as part of the resident's admission into the facility. The facility census was 72.
Review of the admission criteria policy, dated March 2019, showed:
- The objectives of the admission criteria are to admit residents who can be cared for adequately by the facility staff;
- Assure the facility receives appropriate medical and financial records prior to the residents admission;
- All new admissions and residents that are readmitted are screened for mental disorders (MD) and intellectual disorders (ID) per the PASARR process;
- The facility conducts a Level I PASARR screening for all potential admissions regardless of the payer source, to determine if the resident meets the criteria of MD or ID;
- If the Level I screening indicates the resident may meet the criteria for MD or ID, the resident is referred to the state PASARR representative for a Level II screening.
1. Review of Resident #37's admission Minimum Data Set (MDS, a federally mandated assessment completed by the facility staff), dated 1/2/24, showed:
-The resident was admitted to the facility on [DATE];
-Brief Interview for Mental Status (BIMS) score of eight, indicating moderate cognitive impairment;
-He/She had little interest in activities;
-Diagnoses included: PTSD, anxiety, and depression.
Review of the resident's depression care plan, dated 1/9/24, showed:
- He/She had depression and anxiety;
- The resident will remain free from symptoms of depression, anxiety or sad mood;
- The staff were supposed to monitor and report any risk the resident was to harm him/herself.
Review of the resident's record on showed the following:
- No documentation that a PASARR Level I or Level II had been completed.
During an interview and observation on 1/26/24 at 10:02 A.M., the resident said:
-He/She did not like to talk about his/her past;
-He/She said his/her past trauma was people beating on me prior to him/her coming to the facility;
- The resident hugged him/herself and looked down at the floor when he/she talked about his/her past trauma;
- He/she said he/she did not want to talk about it.
During an interview on 1/25/24 at 10:03 A.M., the Administrator said she was supposed to complete PASARR Level I screenings before residents were admitted to the facility. She did not complete Resident #37's PASARR level I screening.
CONCERN
(D)
Potential for Harm - no one hurt, but risky conditions existed
Deficiency F0698
(Tag F0698)
Could have caused harm · This affected 1 resident
**NOTE- TERMS IN BRACKETS HAVE BEEN EDITED TO PROTECT CONFIDENTIALITY**
Based on interviews and record reviews, the facility failed to ensure communication between the facility and dialysis center, f...
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**NOTE- TERMS IN BRACKETS HAVE BEEN EDITED TO PROTECT CONFIDENTIALITY**
Based on interviews and record reviews, the facility failed to ensure communication between the facility and dialysis center, failed to document assessments of one resident (Resident #322) before and after dialysis, and failed to follow the resident's care plan for dialysis/renal failure. Additionally, the facility failed to have an agreement with a certified dialysis facility that included all aspects of how the resident's care will be managed. The facility census was 72.
Review of the facility's Care of a Resident with End-Stage Renal Disease policy dated, September 2010, showed:
-Residents with end-stage renal disease (ESRD) will be cared for according to currently recognized standards of care;
-Agreements between this facility and the contracted ESRD facility will include all aspects of how the resident's care will be managed;
-Staff caring for residents receiving dialysis care outside the facility shall be trained in the nature and clinical assessment data that is to be gathered about the resident's condition on a daily basis;
-The staff caring for residents receiving dialysis shall be trained on the care of grafts and fistulas (an abnormal connection between two body parts, such as an organ or blood vessel.
1. Review of Resident #322's admission MDS, dated [DATE], showed:
-Moderate cognitive impairment;
-Had a central line (thin tube that is inserted into a vein in the arm, leg or neck for access to the large central veins near the heart);
-Received dialysis;
-Diagnosis included, osteomyelitis (a serious infection of the bone), end stage kidney disease, non-pressure chronic ulcer of back, Down Syndrome (a genetic chromosomal disorder that can a cause causing lifelong intellectual disability and developmental delays), diabetes mellitus (a metabolic disease, involving inappropriately elevated blood glucose levels), peripheral vascular disease (progressive circulation disorder caused by narrowing, blockage or spasms in a blood vessel), and atrial fibrillation (a type of abnormal heartbeat).
Review of the resident's care plan dated, 1/17/24, showed:
-The resident needs dialysis related to renal failure;
-Auscultate Bruit and palpate Thrill to fistula/shunt every shift (a whooshing sound heard with a stethoscope near the fistula incision site) and thrill ( vibration caused by blood flowing through the fistula);
-Check and change dressing at access site and document;
-Monitor and treat for side effects;
-Monitor and document vital signs before and after dialysis;
-Monitor and document new or worsening edema, or weight gain.
Review of the resident's medical record showed no agreement with the dialysis center.
Review of the resident's Physician's Order Sheet (POS), dated January 2024, showed:
-No physician's order for dialysis;
-No physician's order to check vitals signs prior to dialysis or post dialysis;
-No physician's order to monitor weight and document new/worsening edema, weight gain;
-No physician's order to check bruit (a whooshing sound heard with a stethoscope near the fistula incision site) and thrill (vibration caused by blood flowing through the fistula).
Review of the resident's nurses notes, dated January 2024, showed:
-No documentation regarding assessments prior to leaving or returning from dialysis;
-No documentation of communication with the dialysis center;
-No documentation to show that vital signs were obtained prior to dialysis or post dialysis;
-No documentation to show the resident's weight was obtained prior to dialysis or post dialysis;
-No documentation to show that staff checked for a bruit and thrill on a daily basis.
Review of the resident's weights showed:
-11/30/23 the resident's weight was 141.9 pounds (lbs);
-12/19/23 the resident's weight was 126 lbs;
-1/8/24 the resident's weight was 128 lbs;
-1/10/24 the resident's weight was 128 lbs;
-No other weights were found.
Review of the resident's medical record showed no dialysis assessments were completed by the facility.
During an interview on 1/25/24 at 10:20 A.M., Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN) D said:
-The resident attends hemodialysis three times per week on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday;
-He/she does not conduct or document assessments on the resident prior to or after returning from dialysis.
During an interview on, 1/25/24, at 3:36 P.M., nephrology Physician D from the dialysis center said:
-He/she expected the facility to check the the resident's vital signs and monitor the resident for any adverse reactions.
During an interview on 1/26/24, at 8:16 A.M., Physician A, the resident's physician, said:
-He/she expected there to be a physician's order for dialysis;
-He/she expected the facility to have a current agreement with a certified dialysis facility;
-He/she expected the facility staff to care for residents receiving dialysis according to currently recognized standards of care.
During an interview on 01/26/24, at 09:16 A.M., the Administrator and the Director of Nursing (DON) said:
-The nurses should complete vital sign prior to and post dialysis;
-The nurses completed complete an assessment of the resident after dialysis;
-There should be documentation in the chart;
-The DON did not know why there was not documentation in the chart for dialysis assessments;
-The facility does not have a contract with with dialysis provider;
-The facility should have a contract with the dialysis provider.
CONCERN
(E)
Potential for Harm - no one hurt, but risky conditions existed
Deficiency F0565
(Tag F0565)
Could have caused harm · This affected multiple residents
Based on interviews and record review, the facility failed to consider concerns and recommendations of the resident council members and failed to communicate with the council regarding concerns as rep...
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Based on interviews and record review, the facility failed to consider concerns and recommendations of the resident council members and failed to communicate with the council regarding concerns as reported by 10 of 16 residents who participated in a group interview. The facility census was 72.
Review of the facility's policy for filing grievances/complaints, dated April of 2017, showed:
- Residents and their representatives have the right to file grievances, either orally or in writing, to the facility staff or to the agency designated to hear grievances (e.g., the State Ombudsman);
- The administrator and staff will make prompt efforts to resolve grievances to the satisfaction of the resident and/or representative;
- All grievances, complaints or recommendations stemming from resident or family groups concerning issues of resident care in the facility will be considered. Actions on such issues will be responded to in writing, including a rationale for the response;
- The resident, or person filing the grievance and/or complaint on behalf of the resident, will be informed (verbally and in writing) of the findings of the investigation and the actions that will be taken to correct any identified problems.
1. Review of the Resident Council Minutes dated 10/6/23, showed:
- 11 residents in attendance;
- Concerns of transportation to stores;
- Concerns about dietary related to cold food, tough chicken, and meal tickets not matching what was served;
- Nursing concerns about call lights not being answered, ice water not being passed, and bedding not being changed;
- Housekeeping concerns about a resident's sink drain, call light, and television screen;
- Administration concerns about church services and billing for two residents;
- No documentation addressing facility follow-up or response to past grievances or concerns brought up in the prior resident group meeting.
Review of the Resident Council Minutes, dated 11/10/23, showed:
- 12 residents in attendance;
- Concerns of transportation to stores;
- Concerns about dietary related to meal tickets not matching what was served, staff not asking residents what they want for meals, and receiving incorrect food;
- Nursing concerns about bedding not being changed and ice water not being passed;
- Housekeeping concerns about the same resident's sink drain, light bulbs being out, a resident's blinds not functioning, and wheelchair brakes not working for one resident;
- Administration concerns about staff not knocking before entering a room;
- No documentation addressing facility follow-up or response to past grievances or concerns brought up in the prior resident group meeting.
Review of the Resident Council Minutes, dated 12/8/23, showed:
- 8 residents in attendance;
- Concerns of transportation to stores;
- Concerns about dietary related to cold food, not getting what is on meal tickets, and late food service;
- Nursing concerns about call light wait times, ice water not being passed, and beds not being made;
- No documentation addressing facility follow-up or response to past grievances or concerns brought up in the prior resident group meeting.
Review of the Resident Council Minutes, dated 1/11/24, showed:
- 11 residents in attendance;
- Actives concerns about wanting to do crafts and smoke break times;
- Concerns about dietary related to residents not getting what was on meal tickets, no variety in food, moldy bread, food temperature concerns, and small portions;
- Nursing concerns about snacks not being passed, ice water not being passed, and call lights no being answered;
- Housekeeping concerns about heat in the facility, dirty floors, and laundry missing;
- No documentation addressing facility follow-up or response to past grievances or concerns brought up in the prior resident group meeting.
During the resident group interview on 1/25/24 at 2:04 P.M.:
- All 16 residents in attendance said they did not know how staff take care of resident complaints or grievances;
- 10 out of 16 residents in attendance said they aren't informed when, or if, a grievance has been responded to;
- 10 out of 16 residents in attendance said no one follows up with them in reference to their concerns.
During an interview on 1/26/24 at 3:32 P.M., the Activities Director said:
-He/She directs most resident council meetings with assistance from a few other department managers;
-If he/she receives a complaint during resident council, he/she fills out a form and gives it to the department manager for that area of concern;
-Old business is discussed in resident council, which is when he/she talks about past grievances;
-Response to past grievances is documented in the old business section of the resident council meeting minutes.
Review of monthly resident council meeting minutes from 10/6/23, 11/10/23, 12/8/23, and 1/11/24 showed:
- No old business section.
During an interview on 1/26/24 at 4:11 P.M., the Activities Director said:
- He/She thought there was an old business section on the meeting minutes, but must have been mistaken;
- Facility response to verbal complaints made during resident council meetings wouldn't be documented anywhere else;
- There is no documentation to show follow up on grievances made during resident council.
During an interview on 1/27/24 at 12:45 P.M., the Administrator said:
- Grievances should be followed up on and documented;
- If complaints are expressed during resident council, a grievance form should be completed.
CONCERN
(E)
Potential for Harm - no one hurt, but risky conditions existed
Deficiency F0572
(Tag F0572)
Could have caused harm · This affected multiple residents
Based on interview and record review, the facility failed to inform residents of their rights periodically during the resident's stay both orally and in writing. This effected all 16 residents present...
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Based on interview and record review, the facility failed to inform residents of their rights periodically during the resident's stay both orally and in writing. This effected all 16 residents present during a resident group interview. The facility census was 72.
Review of the facility's policy on Resident Rights, dated December of 2016, showed:
- Federal and state laws guarantee certain basic rights to all residents of this facility;
- Directions to ensure residents are supported by the facility in exercising his or her rights;
- Directions to ensure residents are informed about his or her rights and responsibilities.
Review of monthly resident council meeting minutes from 10/6/23, 11/10/23, 12/8/23, and 1/11/24 showed:
- A section on each form for resident rights review;
- The same two statements of right to complain and right to be informed documented on all reviewed resident council meeting minutes.
Interview completed with the resident group interview on 1/25/24 at 2:04 P.M., showed:
- 16 of 16 residents in attendance said they have not been informed or their rights verbally or in writing since admission;
- 16 of 16 residents in attendance said resident rights are not discussed during resident council.
During an interview on 1/26/24 at 3:32 P.M., the Activities Director said:
-He/She directs most resident council meetings with assistance from a few other department managers;
- He/She has list of resident rights that he/she goes over;
- Some rights are discussed at the beginning of the meeting;
- The rights he/she goes over isn't documented;
- He/She did not know he/she had to document all of the rights discussed;
- Residents should be informed of their rights verbally and in writing;
- Resident should be informed of more than the two documented rights.
During an interview on 1/27/24 at 12:45 P.M., the Administrator said:
- Resident rights should be reviewed monthly in resident council meeting;
- The rights discussed should be documented and discussed on at least a rotating basis.
CONCERN
(E)
Potential for Harm - no one hurt, but risky conditions existed
Grievances
(Tag F0585)
Could have caused harm · This affected multiple residents
Based interviews and record review, the facility failed to ensure residents were informed they had the right to file grievances in writing, file anonymously, and obtain a written decision regarding a ...
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Based interviews and record review, the facility failed to ensure residents were informed they had the right to file grievances in writing, file anonymously, and obtain a written decision regarding a grievance. The facility census was 72.
Review of the facility's policy for filing grievances/complaints, dated April 2017, showed:
- Residents and their representatives have the right to file grievances, either orally or in writing, to the facility staff or to the agency designated to hear grievances (e.g., the State Ombudsman);
- The administrator and staff will make prompt efforts to resolve grievances to the satisfaction of the resident and/or representative;
- All grievances, complaints or recommendations stemming from resident or family groups concerning issues of resident care in the facility will be considered. Actions on such issues will be responded to in writing, including a rationale for the response;
- Grievances and/or complaints may be submitted orally or in writing, and may be filed anonymously.
- The resident, or person filing the grievance and/or complaint on behalf of the resident, will be informed (verbally and in writing) of the findings of the investigation and the actions that will be taken to correct any identified problems.
Interview completed with the resident group interview on 1/25/24 at 2:04 P.M., showed:
- All 16 residents in attendance were unaware of how to file a grievance in writing;
- The residents knew how to verbally notify a staff member of concerns, but did not know where to obtain a grievance form so a complaint could be made anonymously;
- The residents did not know who the grievance official was.
During an interview on 1/26/24 at 3:32 P.M., the Activities Director said:
- If he/she receives a complaint during resident council he/she fills out a form and gives it to the department manager for that area of concern;
- Resident's have to speak with the Social Services Director about completing a written grievance form;
- He/She does not handle written grievances.
During an interview on 01/26/24 at 3:48 P.M., the Social Services Director said:
- He/She is the grievance coordinator;
- Residents can notify any staff member if they want to make a complaint;
- All staff members have forms in their office and nurse's stations have them in drawer.
During an interview on 1/26/24 at 4:11 P.M., the Activities Director said:
- He/She thought there was an old business section on the meeting minutes, but must have been mistaken;
- Facility response to verbal complaints made during resident council meetings wouldn't be documented anywhere else;
- There is no documentation to show follow up on grievances made during resident council.
During an interview on 1/27/24 at 12:45 P.M., the Administrator said:
- Residents should know how to file a written grievance;
- Residents should be able to file grievance anonymously.
CONCERN
(E)
Potential for Harm - no one hurt, but risky conditions existed
ADL Care
(Tag F0677)
Could have caused harm · This affected multiple residents
**NOTE- TERMS IN BRACKETS HAVE BEEN EDITED TO PROTECT CONFIDENTIALITY** 4 .Review of the facility's policy for showers, revised February 2018, showed:
- The purposes of this procedure are to promote c...
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**NOTE- TERMS IN BRACKETS HAVE BEEN EDITED TO PROTECT CONFIDENTIALITY** 4 .Review of the facility's policy for showers, revised February 2018, showed:
- The purposes of this procedure are to promote cleanliness, provide comfort to the resident and to observe the condition of the resident's skin;
- Staff should document the date and time the shower was performed. The name and title of the individual who assisted the resident with the shower. All assessment data obtained during the shower. If the resident refused the shower and the reason;
- Staff should notify the supervisor if the resident refused the shower.
Review of Resident #40's admission MDS, dated [DATE] showed:
- The resident required substantial assistance with upper body dressing, personal hygiene, rolling left and right, sitting to lying, and lying to sitting on side of bed;
- The resident is dependent on staff for self-care, toileting hygiene, showering, lower body dressing, putting on/taking off footwear, and chair/bed-to-chair transfer;
- Diagnoses of osteomyelitis (a serious infection of the bone that can be either acute or chronic), anemia (a condition that develops when your blood produces a lower-than-normal amount of healthy red blood cells), GERD, hyponatremia (a lower than normal level of sodium in the bloodstream), hyperlipidemia, and paraplegia (paralysis of the legs and lower body, typically caused by spinal injury or disease).
Review of the resident care plan, dated 1/22/24, showed:
- The resident has a chronic wound to his/her coccyx, an ulcer on his/her left ankle, and right hip;
- Interventions of staff performing skin checks daily white providing cares, and staff to do skin checks while bathing the resident;
- Interventions to keep skin clean and dry.
Review of the resident's shower/bathing record for the dates of 1/1/24 to 1/24/24 showed:
- One shower given to the resident on 1/22/24;
- The resident had six scheduled showers on the dates of 1/1/24, 1/4/24, 1/8/24, 1/11/24, 1/15/24, and 1/18/24;
- No documentation showing that showers were given on 1/1/24, 1/4/24, 1/8/24, 1/11/24, 1/15/24, or 1/18/24;
- No documented shower refusals.
During an interview on 1/23/24 at 2:09 P.M. the resident said:
- He/She does not know how often he/she is supposed to get showers;
- He/She only gets about one shower a month;
- He/She would like more showers and does not like missing showers;
- He/She normally showered more than twice a week at home;
- He/She has had to get used to not having showers, because he/she does not get offered many;
- He/She has had to get used to having dandruff.
During an interview on 01/27/24 at 9:20 A.M., CNA I said:
- Residents should receive at least two showers per week:
- Residents could have more showers if they wanted;
- Residents can refuse showers;
- Showers should be documented on shower sheets that need to be signed by a nurse.
During an interview on 1/27/24 at 9:42 A.M. LPN F said:
- Residents should receive two to three showers weekly;
- Residents should receive the number of showers they prefer;
- Residents can refuse showers;
- Completed showers and refusals should be documented.
During an interview on 1/27/24 at 12:45 P.M., the Administrator said:
- Residents should receive showers two times a week;
- Some residents get 3 times per week per their preference;
- Residents can refuse showers;
- Refusals should be documented and care planned.
Based on observations, interviews, and record, review, the facility failed to ensure dependent residents who were unable to carry out activities of daily living (ADL) received the necessary services to maintain good personal hygiene when staff did not provide complete perineal care which affected two of 18 sampled residents, ( Resident #35 and Resident #38) and failed to ensure showers were completed for Resident #40. The facility census was 72.
Review of the facility's policy for perineal care, revised February 2018, showed:
- The purposes of this procedure are to provide cleanliness and comfort to the resident, to prevent infections and skin irritation, and to observe the resident's skin condition;
- For the female resident: wash the perineal area, wiping from front to back; separate the skin folds and wash area downward from front to back; continue to wash the perineum moving form the inside outward to the thighs; turn the resident on his/her side; wash the rectal area thoroughly, wiping from the base of the skin fold towards and extending over the buttocks;
- For the male resident: wash the perineal area from the opening and working outward; continue to wash the perineal area including all the skin folds.
1. Review of Resident #35's quarterly Minimum Data Set (MDS), a federally mandated assessment instrument completed by facility staff, dated 12/22/23, showed:
- Cognitive skills intact;
- Dependent on the assistance of staff for toilet use, transfers and dressing;
- Had a Foley catheter (sterile tube inserted into the bladder to drain urine);
- Always incontinent of bowel;
- Diagnoses included congestive heart failure (accumulation of fluid in the lungs and other areas of the body), high blood pressure, diabetes mellitus, depression and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD, obstruction of air flow that interferes with normal breathing).
Review of the resident's care plan, revised 12/26/23, showed:
- Alteration in activities of daily living (ADL) mobility related to bilateral lower extremity pain due to neuropathy (weakness, numbness and pain from nerve damage) and diabetes mellitus;
- Required the assistance of two staff with bed mobility. He/She is to be turned every two hours when in bed;
- The resident had functional incontinence of bowel and bladder related to age and obesity;
- Provide every two hour checks and as needed, change the incontinent pad if needed, clean and dry skin thoroughly and apply moisture barrier after each incontinent episode;
- Provide prompt attention to incontinent episodes.
Observation on 1/24/24 at 3:40 P.M., showed:
- Certified Nurse Aide (CNA) A and CNA B did not wash their hands and applied gloves;
- CNA B provided incontinent care to the resident;
- CNA B did not separate and clean all areas of the skin folds;
- CNA A and CNA B turned the resident on his/her side;
- CNA B used a new wipe and wiped back and forth across both sides of the buttocks;
- CNA B removed gloves, did not wash his/her hands and applied new gloves.
2. Review of Resident #38's admission MDS, dated [DATE], showed:
- Cognitive skills intact;
- Dependent on the assistance of staff for toilet use;
- Substantial assistance of staff for transfers;
- Always continent of urine;
- Occasionally incontinent of bowel;
- Diagnoses included stroke, anxiety, COPD, and hemiplegia (paralysis affecting one side of the body).
Review of the resident's care plan, revised 1/2/24, showed:
- The resident was continent of bowel and bladder;
- The resident used a bedside commode (portable toilet) and urinal for toileting. He/She required the assistance of two staff with the use of gait belt (a special belt placed around the resident's waist to provide a handle to hold onto during a transfer) and walker. Please assist the resident with toileting and cleaning skin thoroughly after all toileting. Change brief, clothing and linens if needed as resident does have occasional incontinence. Resident to be checked every two hours and as needed every shift for incontinence. Encourage resident to use call light for assistance with toileting.
Observation on 1/23/24 at 2:19 P.M., showed:
- CNA A and CNA B entered the resident's room, did not wash their hands and applied gloves;
- CNA A unfastened the incontinent brief with liquid fecal material in the front and the back of the incontinent brief;
- CNA A used the same area of the wipe and wiped each side of the resident's legs with fecal material;
- CNA A removed gloves, did not wash his/her hands and applied new gloves;
- CNA A used a new wipe, wiped down one side of the groin with fecal material, folded the wipe and wiped down the groin again with fecal material;
- CNA A used a new wipe and with the same area of the wipe, wiped multiple times to remove the fecal material from the pubic hair;
- CNA A used a new wipe and used the same area of the wipe and wiped down the groin with fecal material, folded the wipe and used the same area to clean different areas of the skin with fecal material;
- CNA A used a new wipe and cleaned different areas of the skin folds with fecal material, folded the wipe and with the same area cleaned different areas of the skin with fecal material;
- CNA A and CNA B turned the resident on his/her side;
- CNA A used a new wipe and wiped from front to back with fecal material, folded the wipe and wiped from front to back with fecal material;
- CNA A used a new wipe and with the same area of the wipe, wiped both side of the resident's lower legs with fecal material;
- CNA A used a new wipe and wiped the buttocks with fecal material, folded the wipe and wiped the other side of the buttocks;
- CNA A used a new wipe and wiped one side of the buttocks with fecal material, folded the wipe and wiped back to front with fecal material on the wipe;
- CNA A used a new wipe and with the same area of the wipe, wiped each side of the resident's buttocks with a smear of fecal material;
- CNA A used a new wipe and with the same area of the wipe and wiped fecal material from the top of the inner leg to the groin;
- CNA A and CNA B turned the resident on his/her side;
- CNA A used a new wipe and with the same area, wiped from back to front twice then on each side of the buttock with fecal material;
- CNA B removed the soiled liquid incontinent brief, removed the soiled fitted sheet and placed a clean incontinent brief on the resident.
3. During an interview on 1/29/24 at 4:09 P.M., CNA A said:
- He/She should not use the same area of the wipe to clean different areas of the skin. The wipe should just be used once;
- He/She should have separated and cleaned all areas of the skin where urine or feces had touched;
- Should wipe down so you don't cause a urinary tract infection (UTI, an infection in any part of the urinary system);
- He/She thought you could fold the wipe as long as there was no fecal material on it.
During an interview on 1/29/24 at 4:30 P.M., CNA B said:
- He/She should not have used the same area of the wipe to clean different areas of the skin;
- He/She wiped once, folded the wipe, wiped again and then discarded the wipe;
- Should separate and clean all areas of the skin where urine or feces has touched;
- Should wipe from front to back.
During an interview on 1/27/24 at 12:45 P.M., the Administrator said:
- Staff should wipe from front to back;
- Staff should not use the same area of the wipe to clean different areas of the skin;
- Staff should separate and clean all areas of the skin where urine or feces has touched;
- It should be one swipe with one wipe;
- Staff should not fold the wipe.
CONCERN
(E)
Potential for Harm - no one hurt, but risky conditions existed
Respiratory Care
(Tag F0695)
Could have caused harm · This affected multiple residents
**NOTE- TERMS IN BRACKETS HAVE BEEN EDITED TO PROTECT CONFIDENTIALITY** Based on observations, interviews, and record review the facility failed to ensure staff provided proper respiratory care for th...
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**NOTE- TERMS IN BRACKETS HAVE BEEN EDITED TO PROTECT CONFIDENTIALITY** Based on observations, interviews, and record review the facility failed to ensure staff provided proper respiratory care for three of 18 sampled residents (Resident #9, #11, and #374) when staff failed to effectively clean oxygen concentrator filters, properly label and date oxygen concentrator oxygen tubing, and properly fill and date humidified bottles. The facility census was 72.
Review of the facility's Oxygen Administration policy, dated October of 2010, showed:
- The purpose of the policy was to provide guidelines for safe oxygen administration;
- Directions to verify that there is a physician's order for this procedure, review the physician's orders or facility, review the resident's care plan to assess for any special needs of the resident, and assemble the equipment and supplies as needed;
- Directions to check the mask, tank, humidifying jar, etc., to be sure they are in good working order and are securely fastened and to be sure there is water in the humidifying jar and that the water level is high enough that the water bubbles as oxygen flows through;
- No documentation regarding instructions for labeling or dating tubing;
- No documentation regarding cleaning or replacement of filters;
- No documentation showing instructions to obtain specific cleaning instructions from manufacturers or suppliers of the oxygen concentrators.
1. Review of Resident #11's admission Minimum Data Set (MDS), a federally mandated assessment instrument completed by facility staff, dated 1/4/24, showed:
- A Brief Interview of Mental Status (BIMS) score of 10, which indicated moderate cognitive impairment;
- The resident required moderate assistance with rolling left and right, sitting to lying, lying to sitting on side of bed, and toilet transfer;
- The resident required substantial assistance with oral hygiene, toileting hygiene, upper body dressing, lower body dressing, putting on and taking off footwear, personal hygiene, sitting to standing, and chair and bed-to-chair transfer;
- Active diagnoses of anemia (a condition that develops when your blood produces a lower-than-normal amount of healthy red blood cells), congestive heart failure (a long-term condition in which your heart can't pump blood well enough to meet your body's needs), gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD)( a disease which occurs when stomach acid repeatedly flows back into the tube connecting your mouth and stomach), pneumonia, hyperlipidemia (which results from an elevated level of lipids, like cholesterol and triglycerides, in your blood), a hip fracture, and respiratory failure.
Review of the resident's active physician orders sheet, dated 1/22/24 , showed:
- An order for two to three liters of oxygen (O2) for low O2 saturation (the amount of oxygen in the blood stream).
No documentation related to cleaning or maintenance of O2 tubing, filters, or humidified bottles.
Review of the resident's Care Plan, dated 1/9/24 showed:
- The resident has complaints of pain with coughing related to his/her respiratory failure;
- The resident has shortness of breath related to acute respiratory failure;
- An intervention related to the resident's order to receive two to three liters of oxygen (O2) for low O2 saturation;
- The resident is to receive the oxygen via nasal cannula (NC) with humidified air;
- The resident has oxygen therapy as needed related to acute respiratory failure;
- Interventions to fill humidifier bottle daily, change bottle out weekly, and change bottle as needed.
Review of the resident's treatment administration record (TAR) for the dates of 1/3/24 to 1/24/24, showed:
- No documentation of the resident receiving O2.
Observation on 1/23/24 at 2:59 P.M., showed:
- The resident coughing and stating that he/she had pneumonia;
- The resident received O2 though an O2 concentrator via a NC;
- The O2 set to two liters;
- The O2 tubing was undated and lying across the floor;
- The filter on the left side of the concentrator covered with a coat of lint and debris;
- No humidified bottle in place.
Observation on 1/24/24 at 2:46 P.M., showed:
- The resident coughing;
- The resident received O2 though an O2 concentrator via a NC;
- The O2 set to two liters;
- The O2 tubing was undated and lying across the floor;
- The filter on the left side of the concentrator covered with a coat of lint and debris;
- No humidified bottle in place.
2. Review of Resident # 374's Entry MDS, dated [DATE], showed:
- An admission date of 1/22/24;
- BIMS was not assessed;
- No documentation of the resident's functional status;
- No diagnoses information.
Review of the resident's undated transfer/discharge report showed:
- Diagnoses of acquired absence of larynx, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) (a group of diseases that cause airflow blockage and breathing-related problems), GERD, pain, and lack of coordination.
Review of the resident's active physician orders sheet, dated 1/23/24 , showed:
- An order for the resident to receive O2 at four liters per minute related to COPD;
- No documentation related to cleaning or maintenance of O2 tubing, filters, or humidified bottles.
Review of the resident's Care Plan, dated 1/23/24 showed:
- The resident receives oxygen therapy;
- An intervention to change O2 tubing weekly and place in a dated bag;
- An intervention to clean O2 concentrator filters weekly;
- An intervention to have nurses check O2 saturations each shift;
- An intervention to provide two to four liters via NC;
- An intervention to provide a humidifier bottle on the O2 concentrator and to check water level each shift and fill with distilled water.
Observation on 1/23/24 at 6:45 P.M. showed:
- The resident's O2 concentrator was on 4 liters per minute;
- The O2 tubing was undated;
- The resident received O2 via face mask;
- The face mask was dirty and full of spots of mucus;
- The sealed filter in unit was dirty and dated 7-10-23.
3. Review of Resident #9's quarterly MDS, dated [DATE], showed:
- Cognitive skills severely impaired;
- Upper extremity impaired on one side;
- Diagnoses included congestive heart failure (CHF, an accumulation of fluid in the lungs and other areas of the body), stroke, Alzheimer's disease, and dementia.
Review of the resident's care plan, revised 8/25/23, showed:
- The resident had shortness of air related to acute and chronic respiratory failure with hypoxia (lack of oxygen to the tissues), or hypercapnia (when there is too much carbon dioxide in the blood), and CHF;
- Administer oxygen at 2L/NC as needed to keep oxygen saturation over 92%. If oxygen is being utilized, tubing is to be changed bi-weekly, sign and date. Filter on the concentrator to be changed weekly per provider orders. Provide humidification when the resident is using the concentrator for oxygen;
- The resident used oxygen for shortness of air as needed to keep oxygen saturation above 92%;
- Change the oxygen tubing weekly. Place in bag and date. Clean filters weekly on oxygen concentrator. Check the humidified bottle's water level each shift, clean, dry and fill to fill line with distilled water as needed.
Review of the resident's POS, dated January 2024, showed:
- Order date: 10/4/23 - change oxygen tubing, humidifier bottle, and plastic holding bag for oxygen tubing as needed;
- Order date: 10/4/23 - change oxygen tubing, humidifier bottle and plastic holding bag for oxygen tubing every night shift every Thursday related to shortness of air;
- Order date: 10/4/23 - clean filter on oxygen concentration weekly every night shift related to shortness of air;
- Order date: 10/4/23 - oxygen at two liters (2L)/ nasal cannula (NC), continuous. Titrate to keep oxygen saturation (amount of oxygen in the blood), greater than 92%. Notify provider if requiring 4L/NC, every day and night shift related to shortness of air.
Observation on 1/23/24 at 7:53 P.M., showed:
- The resident's oxygen tubing was not dated;
- The humidified water bottle was almost empty and was dated 9/14/23;
- The resident's oxygen was on at 3L/NC.
4. During an interview on 1/25/24 at 4:40 A.M., Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN) A said:
- The oxygen tubing was supposed to be changed and dated every Thursday;
- The humidified water bottle should be cleaned and filled with distilled water every Thursday and should be dated.
During an interview on 01/27/24 at 9:20 A.M., CNA I said:
- He/She changes O2 tubing;
- He/She fills humidified bottles with distilled water;
- He/She does not clean filters on O2 concentrators;
- He/She does not know how to clean and change filters;
- O2 tubing should be dated;
- He/She would notify the nurse if something needs fixed that he/she cannot do.
During an interview on 1/27/24 at 9:42 A.M., LPN F said:
- Nurses usually manage O2 concentrators;
- Oxygen tubing should be dated;
- Oxygen tubing should be changed by nurses;
- Tubing should be replace every 72 hours;
- Maintenance usually cleans the filters on O2 concentrators;
- Filters should be clean;
- A filter dated 7/10/23 should have been changed by now;
- He/She has received in-services on cleaning and managing O2 concentrators;
- If orders do not specify when to change filter or tubing, more clear orders should be acquired.
During an interview on 1/27/24 at 12:45 P.M., the Director of Nursing said:
- The night shift nurse that is scheduled for Thursday and Sunday nights should change and date O2 tubing;
- Staff are supposed to wash the filters as well;
- The humidified water bottle should be filled with distilled water, dated, and should be changed with the same schedule as the tubing.
- The filters should be cleaned and changed with each use.
During an interview on 1/27/24 at 12:45 P.M., the Administrator said:
- Filters dated 9/14/23 and 7/10/23 would not be appropriate;
- He/She would expect O2 filters to be changed between residents;
- O2 concentrators are typically given to maintenance for servicing.
CONCERN
(E)
Potential for Harm - no one hurt, but risky conditions existed
Deficiency F0700
(Tag F0700)
Could have caused harm · This affected multiple residents
**NOTE- TERMS IN BRACKETS HAVE BEEN EDITED TO PROTECT CONFIDENTIALITY** 3. Review of Resident #53's admission MDS, dated [DATE] showed:
- A BIMS score of 15, indicating no cognitive impairment;
-- The...
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**NOTE- TERMS IN BRACKETS HAVE BEEN EDITED TO PROTECT CONFIDENTIALITY** 3. Review of Resident #53's admission MDS, dated [DATE] showed:
- A BIMS score of 15, indicating no cognitive impairment;
-- The resident required partial assistance for rolling left and right, sitting to lying, and lying to sitting on side of bed;
- The resident required substantial assistance for toileting hygiene and sitting to standing;
- The resident was dependent on staff for showers, lower body dressing, putting on/taking off footwear, chair/bed-to-chair transfer, and toilet transfer;
- Diagnoses of leg amputation, anemia (a condition that develops when your blood produces a lower-than-normal amount of healthy red blood cells), coronary artery disease (a disease that occurs when the coronary arteries, the blood vessels supplying blood to the heart, narrow), diabetes mellitus (a metabolic disease, involving inappropriately elevated blood glucose levels), gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD)(a disease which occurs when stomach acid repeatedly flows back into the tube connecting your mouth and stomach), hyperlipidemia (which results from an elevated level of lipids, like cholesterol and triglycerides, in your blood), and hypokalemia (a lower than normal potassium level in your bloodstream).
Review of the resident's care plan, dated 1/2/24, showed:
- No documentation for use of bedrails or grab bars.
Review of the resident's Electronic Medical Record on 1/25/24 at 9:50 AM showed:
- No documentation of entrapment assessments;
- No documentation for bedrail assessments:
- No documentation for bedrail consent forms.
Observation and interview on 1/23/24 at 1:43 P.M. showed:
- The resident sitting next to his/her bed in wheelchair;
- The resident's bed had half rails on both sides at the head of the bed;
- The resident advised he/she uses them to help reposition.
4. During an interview on 1/27/24 at 9:42 A.M. Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN) F said:
- Residents should have bed rail assessments completed before be rails are used:
- Bedrail assessments are done by management;
- Residents should have entrapment assessments completed upon admission and monthly;
- Residents should have signed consent forms to use bedrails.
During an interview on 1/27/24 at 12:45 P.M., the Administrator said:
- Residents should have bedrail assessments completed quarterly;
- Entrapment assessments should be completed annually;
- Signed consent should be obtained for bedrail use;
- Mattresses should fit the bed frame appropriately.
During an interview on 1/25/24 at 1:19 P.M. the MDS coordinator said:
- Entrapments assessments and bed frame measurements were completed by maintenance;
- Entrapment assessments and bedrail assessments are supposed to be completed when the side rails were installed on the resident's beds, upon admission to the facility, quarterly and annually;
- He/She completed the bedrail assessment's during the same time frames;
- He/She missed completing some of the assessments within the required time frames;
- The facility did not have be rail consents for the resident or legal representative to sign;
- Resident's #13 and #15 should have had entrapment assessments and bedrail assessments completed.
During an interview on 1/25/24 at 2:29 P.M. the Maintenance Director said:
- He checked the resident's bedrails and frames every month to make sure they were in good repair;
- He went room to room to check on each resident's bed;
- Sometimes the aides will change mattresses for residents and not tell him;
- He expected to be notified either by the electronic work order system or verbally when a resident is placed on a bed frame or mattress the resident was not originally assessed for;
- No resident should be on a bed with a gap of five inches between the mattress and the bedrail;
- A mattress with a large gap would require a wedge to be placed;
-No staff have reported any of the residents on a mattress that had a large gap.
During an interview on 1/25/24 at 2:38 P.M. the Maintenance Director said he spoke with the MDS coordinator and they needed to have a better system in place rather than he go room to room to check on the resident beds so that they can more easily identify when a resident was not on the correct bed.
Based on observation, record review, and interview the facility failed to assess the risk for entrapment prior to the installation of bedrails, failed to obtain written consent for the use of the bedrails, and failed to complete a bedrail assessment or complete a bedrail assessment correctly for 3 of 18 sampled residents, (Resident #13, #15 and #53). The facility failed to ensure one resident's (Resident #13) mattress fit the bed frame when the resident's foam mattress was approximately five inches smaller than the bariatric bed frame it was on. The facility census was 72.
Review of the bed rail policy, dated December 2016, showed:
- Bed rail assessment will be completed to determine the resident's symptoms, risk for entrapment, and the reason for the side rail use;
- The assessment will include a review of the resident's bed mobility, risk for entrapment, and the bed frame dimensions are appropriate for the resident;
- Consent for the use of side rails will be obtained from the resident or the resident's legal representative;
- The resident will be checked periodically for side rail safety;
- When side rails are in use, the facility will assess the space between the mattress and side rails to reduce the risk for entrapment.
1. Review of Resident #13's annual Minimum Data Set (MDS, a federally mandated assessment completed by the facility staff), dated 12/3/23, showed:
- He/She had a Brief Interview for Mental Status (BIMS) score of 12, indicating minimal cognitive deficit;
- He/She required the assistance of two staff transfer, bed mobility, use the toilet, and get dressed;
- Diagnoses included: Anxiety, pain and weakness;
- He/She had bedrails documented.
Review of the resident's physical restraint care plan, dated 2/22/23, showed, he/she used half bedrails to both sides of his/her bed to assist the resident to reposition while in bed.
Review of the resident's record showed the following:
- The facility staff did not obtain signed consent from the resident indicating he/she consented to the use of the bedrails;
- The facility staff completed an entrapment assessment on 4/21/23, indicating the resident was using quarter bedrails on a bariatric bed (large bed);
- The facility did not complete an entrapment assessment when the half bedrails were installed;
- The facility staff completed a bedrail use assessment on 12/1/23, indicating the resident bed was assessed and it was determined he/she did not have a potential hazard for getting caught between the bed and siderail.
Observation on 1/23/24 at 7:10 P.M., showed:
- The resident was lying in his/her bed with half bedrails in the raised position;
- The bed frame was bariatric size with a much smaller mattress;
- Five inch gap between the bedrail and the edge of the mattress.
Observation on 1/29/24 at 2:23 P.M., showed:
- The resident was lying in his/her bed with both bedrails in the raised position;
- The bed frame continued to show a five inch gap between the mattress and the bedrails.
2. Review of Resident #15's quarterly MDS, dated [DATE], showed:
- He/She had BIMS score of 14, indicating no cognitive impairment;
- Diagnoses included: Urinary Tract Infection, diabetes (a disease in which the body does not process blood sugar properly), and depression;
- Dependent on staff to use the toilet, get dressed, and showering.
Review of the comprehensive care plan, dated 8/11/23, showed:
- Resident required assistance using the toilet, showering, and getting dressed;
- The facility staff did not care plan the use of half bedrails.
Review of the resident's record showed the following:
- A physicians order, dated 8/30/23, the resident may have bedrails;
- The facility staff documented a bedrail assessment, dated 1/10/24, indicating the resident was approved for a U- Bar or Halo (both are small rail that are used to assist the resident to change position);
- The facility did not document an entrapment assessment for the bedrail;
- The facility staff did not obtain signed consent by the resident for the use of the bedrails.
Observation on 1/23/24 at 2:32 P.M., showed the resident was lying in a bariatric bed with half bedrails in the raised position.
Observation on 1/24/24 at 3:26 P.M., showed the resident lying in bed with both half bedrails in the raised position.
Observation and interview on 1/25/24 at 9:00 A.M., the resident was in his/her bed with both bedrails in the up position.
- The resident said he/she used the bedrails to move in his/her bed;
- The resident did not remember if he/she signed a consent form or if the facility staff assessed his/her to use the bedrails.
CONCERN
(E)
Potential for Harm - no one hurt, but risky conditions existed
Deficiency F0761
(Tag F0761)
Could have caused harm · This affected multiple residents
Based on observations, interviews, and record review, the facility failed to discard expired medications and biologicals stored within the medication room and the medication carts, which affected thre...
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Based on observations, interviews, and record review, the facility failed to discard expired medications and biologicals stored within the medication room and the medication carts, which affected three of 18 sampled residents, ( Resident #2, #39, and #499), failed to date an opened bottle of Lorazepam (used to treat anxiety) for Resident #30, and failed to date an opened vial of Novolin N insulin (an intermediate-acting insulin used to lower blood sugars) for Resident #16. The facility census was 72.
Review of the facility's policy for storage of medications, revised November 2020, showed:
- The facility stores all drugs and biologicals in a safe, secure, and orderly manner;
- Discontinued, outdated, or deteriorated drugs or biologicals are returned to the dispensing pharmacy or destroyed.
Review of the manufacturer guidelines for NovoLog insulin (fast acting) vial, at www.mynovoinsulin.com, dated March 2023, showed dispose after 42 days, even if there is insulin left in the vial.
Review of the manufacturer guidelines for Novolin N insulin (intermediate-acting insulin) vial, at www.novo-pi.com/novolinn.pdf, dated November 2022, showed dispose after 28 days, even if there is insulin left in the vial.
During an observation and interview on 1/25/24 at 7:16 A.M., of the South medication room showed:-- Resident #39 had 11 Prochlorperazine suppositories (used to treat nausea and vomiting) 25 milligrams (mg.), expired 10/23;
- Resident #30 had an opened bottle of liquid Lorazepam and did not have a date when it was opened. The box that contained the liquid Lorazepam said to discard 90 days after opening;
- Resident #2 had an opened vial of Novolog insulin with an opened dated of 7/16/23;
- Resident #16 had an opened vial of Novolin N insulin and did not have a date when it was opened;
- Resident #499 had a vial of Novolin N insulin, opened 11/14/23 and discard date 12/4/23;
- The Director of Nursing (DON) said the night shift nurse should check the medication room and medication carts for expired medications nightly when checking the refrigerator temperatures. The expired suppositories should have been discarded. Lorazepam should be dated when it was opened. The Novolog insulin should not be used if it was expired or if it was not dated when it was opened.
During an interview on 1/27/24 at 12:45 P.M., the DON said:
- Insulin should be dated when opened and should not be used if not dated;
- Lorazepam should be dated when opened.
During an interview on 1/29/23 at 3:30 P.M., CMT B said:
- Usually the nurses randomly check the medication rooms and medication carts for expired medications;
- Lorazepam should be dated when opened;
- Insulin should be dated when it was opened.
During an interview on 1/27/24 at 12:45 P.M., the DON said:
- Insulin should be dated when opened and should not be used if not dated;
- Lorazepam should be dated when opened.
CONCERN
(E)
Potential for Harm - no one hurt, but risky conditions existed
Deficiency F0804
(Tag F0804)
Could have caused harm · This affected multiple residents
**NOTE- TERMS IN BRACKETS HAVE BEEN EDITED TO PROTECT CONFIDENTIALITY** Based on observations, interviews and record review, the facility failed to serve food to the residents that was palatable, attr...
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**NOTE- TERMS IN BRACKETS HAVE BEEN EDITED TO PROTECT CONFIDENTIALITY** Based on observations, interviews and record review, the facility failed to serve food to the residents that was palatable, attractive, and served at a safe and appetizing temperature. This affected two out of 18 sampled residents (Resident #26 and #54). The facility census was 72.
Review of the facility's Food and Nutrition Services Policy, dated 2001, showed:
-Each resident is provided with a nourishing, palatable, well-balanced diet that meets his/her daily nutritional and special dietary needs, taking into consideration the preference of each resident;
-Reasonable efforts will be made to accommodate resident choices and preferences;
-The food and nutrition services staff will inspect food trays to ensure that the correct meal is provided to each resident, the food appears palatable and attractive and it is serviced at a safe and appetizing temperature.
Review of the facility's Food Production and Food Safety Policy, dated 2021, showed:
-Staff will check food temperatures correctly and record the temperatures;
-Check temperatures half way through the tray line to ensure safety.
Review of the facility's Texture and Consistency-Modified Diets Policy, dated 2021, showed:
-Texture and consistency-modified diets should be individualized;
-The food and nutrition services department will be responsible for preparing and serving the correct consistency of food and beverage.
1. Observation of the kitchen on 1/25/24, at 10:46 A.M., showed:
-The cooked hamburgers were in the oven on the warm setting;
-The pureed ham was already cooked and in oven on the warm setting.
Observation of the lunch meal test tray on 1/25/24, at 11:55 A.M., showed:
-The macaroni cold salad was 58 degrees Fahrenheit;
-The pureed peas was 102 degrees Fahrenheit;
-The hamburger was tough, hard to chew, and had no flavor;
-The ham was black on the bottom and tasted burnt.
During an interview on 1/25/24 at 1:30 P.M., [NAME] A said:
- The Dietary Manager (DM) prepared the pureed ham and put it in the oven to keep warm until the meal;
-He/she was not sure what time the DM put the pureed ham and the cooked hamburgers in the oven;
-The ham browns easy on the bottom, but he/she did not think it was burnt;
-The hamburgers should not be tough and hard to chew with no flavor;
-The temperature of hot food at the time of service should be above 135 degrees Fahrenheit;
-Cold foods should be below 41 degrees Fahrenheit at the time of service.
During an interview on 1/25/24 at 1:45 P.M., the DM said:
-He/she could not remember when he/she put the purred ham and the cooked hamburgers in the oven;
- The pureed ham should have been made 30 minutes before lunch and put on the steam table;
- The hamburger should have been cooked closer to lunch and put on the steam table;
- The ham should not be burnt and it should have a good flavor;
-The hamburgers should not be tough and hard to chew with no flavor;
-The temperature of hot food at the time of service should be above 135 degrees Fahrenheit;
-Cold foods should be below 41 degrees Fahrenheit at the time of meal service.
During an interview on 1/25/24, at 2:26 P.M., the Administrator said:
-Food should not be burnt and it should have a good flavor;
-The food should be cooked and served at safe and appetizing temperatures.
During an interview on 1/31/24 at 2:07 P.M., the Registered Dietitian was asked about the palatability and temperature of the food, but did not have a response.
2. Review of Resident #26's quarterly MDS dated [DATE] showed:
- He/She had a BIMS score of 15, indicating no cognitive impairment.
Review of the resident's nutrition care plan dated 9/6/23 showed:
- He/She was to receive a daily menu so the he/she could make his/her meal choices;
- The resident ate in his/her room and was able to feed him/herself.
During an interview on 1/24/24 at 8:45 A.M., the resident said:
- He/She has lived at the facility for six months;
- The food was terrible and often cold;
- The facility served fish and chicken often;
- The facility has a set menu, but they did offer alternatives.
During an interview on 1/25/24 at 8:21 A.M. the resident said the evening meal last night was gross, it was stew piled onto a bread roll. He/She did not eat it because it did not look appetizing.
3. Review of Resident #54's admission MDS dated [DATE], showed:
- He/She had a BIMS score of 14, indicating no cognitive impairment.
During an interview on 1/23/24 at 2:12 P.M. the resident said:
- The kitchen served a main entree and had other items to choose from if he/she wanted;
- The kitchen rarely seasons the food;
- He/She would like his/her food seasoned better.
During an interview on 1/24/24 at 8:07 A.M., the resident said:
- Breakfast was served and the eggs were boring and without flavor.
During an interview on 1/27/24 at 12:45 P.M. the Administrator said:
- She expected the food to be served timely, hot and have an appealing taste;
- He/She had received some complaints about the food not being seasoned well and the kitchen has improved the seasoning of the food.
CONCERN
(E)
Potential for Harm - no one hurt, but risky conditions existed
Deficiency F0805
(Tag F0805)
Could have caused harm · This affected multiple residents
**NOTE- TERMS IN BRACKETS HAVE BEEN EDITED TO PROTECT CONFIDENTIALITY** Based on observations, record review, and interviews, the facility failed to ensure staff prepared foods designed in a way to me...
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**NOTE- TERMS IN BRACKETS HAVE BEEN EDITED TO PROTECT CONFIDENTIALITY** Based on observations, record review, and interviews, the facility failed to ensure staff prepared foods designed in a way to meet the needs of individual residents when they did not ensure the puree (a texture-modified diet in which all foods have a soft, pudding-like consistency) food had a smooth and appropriate consistency. This affected three residents identified by the facility as having orders for a pureed diet (Residents #9, #35, and #322). The facility census was 72.
Review of the facility's Food and Nutrition Services Policy, dated 2001, showed:
-Each resident is provided with a nourishing, palatable, well-balanced diet that meets his/her daily nutritional and special dietary needs, taking into consideration the preference of each resident;
-Reasonable efforts will be made to accommodate resident choices and preferences;
-The food and nutrition services staff will inspect food trays to ensure that the correct meal is provided to each resident, the food appears palatable and attractive and it is served at a safe and appetizing temperature.
Review of the facility's Texture and Consistency-Modified Diets Policy, dated 2021, showed:
-Texture and consistency-modified diets should be individualized;
-The food and nutrition services department will be responsible for preparing and serving the correct consistency of food and beverage.
1. Review of Resident #9's annual Minimum Data Set (MDS), a federally mandated assessment instrument completed by facility staff, dated 8/9/23, showed:
-Moderate cognitive impairment;
-Severe visual impairment;
-Extensive assistance of one staff for transfers, bathing, locomotion, toileting and eating;
-Coughing and pain while swallowing;
-Diagnoses included dementia, heart failure and high blood pressure.
A review of the resident's care plan, revised 12/22/23, showed:
-The resident was on a pureed diet.
A review of the resident's Physician Order Sheet (POS), dated January 2024, showed the resident had an order for a pureed diet.
2. A review of Resident #35's annual MDS, dated [DATE], showed:
-Severe cognitive impairment;
-Extensive assistance of one staff for transfers, bathing, locomotion, toileting and eating;
-Diagnoses included dementia, stroke and high blood pressure.
A review of the resident's care plan, dated 11/12/23, showed:
-The resident was on a pureed diet.
A review of the resident's POS, dated January 2024, showed the resident had an order for a pureed diet.
3. Review of Resident #322's admission Minimum Data Set MDS, a federally mandated assessment instrument completed by facility staff, dated 12/6/23, showed:
-Moderate cognitive impairment;
-Dependent on staff for Activities of Daily Living (ADLs);
-Mechanical altered diet;
-Diagnosis included, osteomyelitis (a serious infection of the bone), end stage kidney disease, non-pressure chronic ulcer of back, Down Syndrome (a genetic chromosomal disorder that can a cause causing lifelong intellectual disability and developmental delays), diabetes mellitus (a metabolic disease, involving inappropriately elevated blood glucose levels), peripheral vascular disease (progressive circulation disorder caused by narrowing, blockage or spasms in a blood vessel), and atrial fibrillation (a type of abnormal heartbeat).
Review of the resident's care plan, dated 1/17/24, showed:
-Resident has ADL self-care performance deficit related to impaired balance and limited mobility;
-The care plan did not address the resident's mechanically altered diet.
A review of the resident's POS, dated January 2024, showed the resident had an order for a pureed diet.
Review of the purred meal recipe for 1/25/24 showed:
-3 ounces (oz) Pureed Ham;
-4 oz Pureed Macaroni Salad;
-4 oz Pureed Peas;
-4 oz Milk 2%;
-8 oz Coffee/tea;
-Pureed diet should be easy to chew;
-Pureed diet should not contain hard, touch, chewy, fibrous, seeds, husks, or bones;
-Pureed diet should be a smooth texture and holds shape on a spoon.
Observation of meal preparation for lunch on 1/25/24, at 10:41, A.M., showed:
- [NAME] A began preparing the pureed lunch meal;
- He/she placed two cups of cooked peas into the food processor;
- He/she then turned on the food processor and began adding butter and blended until it was the desired consistency;
- The mixture was thick with visible pea sized chunks in it.
Observation of lunch service on 1/25/24, at 11:55 A.M., showed:
-Residents #9, #35, and #322 being served their pureed meals that were thick and had chunks in it;
-Resident #322 did not eat the peas;
-Resident #9 was having difficulty chewing the peas.
Observation of pureed lunch meal on 1/25/24, at 12:12 P.M., showed:
- Pureed peas were very thick and allowed a spoon to remain standing with husks of the pea, that required chewing and were hard to swallow.
During an interview on 1/25/24 at 1:36 P.M., the [NAME] A said:
- Pureed food should be a smooth, pudding-like consistency with no chunks or particles;
- He/she did not realize the pureed food was chunky;
- Pureed food should be easy to swallow.
During an interview on 1/25/24 at 1:45 P.M., the Dietary Manager said:
- Pureed food should be a smooth, pudding-like consistency with no chunks or particles;
- Pureed food should be easy to swallow.
During an interview on 1/25/24, at 2:26 P.M., the Administrator said:
- There should be no chunks of food in the pureed food;
- Pureed food should not be lumpy;
- Pureed food should not be hard to swallow.
CONCERN
(E)
Potential for Harm - no one hurt, but risky conditions existed
Deficiency F0809
(Tag F0809)
Could have caused harm · This affected multiple residents
**NOTE- TERMS IN BRACKETS HAVE BEEN EDITED TO PROTECT CONFIDENTIALITY** Based on observations, interviews, and record review, the facility failed to offer evening snacks to all residents. This affecte...
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**NOTE- TERMS IN BRACKETS HAVE BEEN EDITED TO PROTECT CONFIDENTIALITY** Based on observations, interviews, and record review, the facility failed to offer evening snacks to all residents. This affected four of 18 sampled residents (Resident #11, #32, #36, #38) and other residents who attended the resident group interview. The facility census was 72.
Review of the facility's serving snacks (between meals and bedtime) policy, dated September 2010, showed:
- The purpose of this procedure was to provide the resident with adequate nutrition;
- Directions to review the resident's care plan and provide for any special needs of the resident;
- Directions to check the tray before serving the snack to be sure that it is the correct diet ordered and that the food consistency is appropriate to the resident's ability to chew and swallow;
- Directions for the person performing this procedure to record the following information in the resident's medical record: the date and time the snack was served, the name and title of the individual(s) who served the snack, the amount of snack eaten by the resident (i.e., 50%, 75%, etc.), if and how the resident participated in the procedure or any changes in the resident's ability to participate in the procedure, any special request(s) made by the resident concerning his or her eating time or food likes and dislikes, any difficulty the resident had in feeding himself or herself, chewing or swallowing, if the resident refused the snack, the reason(s) why and the intervention taken, and the signature and title of the person recording the data.
1. Interview completed with the resident group interview on 1/25/24 at 2:04 P.M., showed:
- 13 out of the 16 residents in attendance said they do not get offered a snack after dinner;
- 14 out of the 16 residents in attendance said they would prefer to have a snack offered in the evenings.
2. Review of Resident #11's admission Minimum Data Set (MDS), a federally mandated assessment instrument completed by facility staff, dated 1/4/24, showed:
- A Brief Interview of Mental Status (BIMS) score of 10, which indicated moderate cognitive impairment;
- The resident was independent for eating;
- It was somewhat important to the resident to have snacks available between meals;
- Active diagnoses of anemia (a condition that develops when your blood produces a lower-than-normal amount of healthy red blood cells), congestive heart failure (a long-term condition in which your heart can't pump blood well enough to meet your body's needs), gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) (a disease which occurs when stomach acid repeatedly flows back into the tube connecting your mouth and stomach), pneumonia, hyperlipidemia (which results from an elevated level of lipids, like cholesterol and triglycerides, in your blood), a hip fracture, and respiratory failure.
Review of the resident comprehensive Care Plan, dated 1/9/24, showed:
- The resident had a diagnosis of vitamin D deficiency;
- The resident should be monitored for signs an symptoms of this deficiency and be provided foods enriched with vitamin D when possible;
- The resident had a diagnoses of hypokalemia (a lower than normal potassium level in your bloodstream);
- The resident should be monitored for signs an symptoms of this diagnosis and provided foods rich in potassium.
Review of the resident's task report for provided snacks dated of 12-1-23 to 1-29-24, showed:
- No documentation of any snacks given to the resident.
During an interview on 1/29/24 at 2:32 P.M., the resident said:
- He/She hasn't ever been offered a snack in the evening;
- He/She doesn't always eat all of his/her dinner and would like a snack sometimes;
- He/She would like to be offered a snack to save for later if he/she did not want it at the time it was offered.
3. Review of Resident #32's significant change in status MDS, dated [DATE], showed:
- Cognitive skills impaired;
- Independent with eating;
- Very important to have snacks between meals;
- Diagnosis included diabetes mellitus.
Review of the resident's care plan, revised 1/5/24, showed:
- The resident was independent with activities of daily living (ADLs) tasks;
- The resident ate meals in his/her room and was on a regular diet and able to feed him/herself;
- The resident is to receive med pass (supplement) as ordered by the physician and document amount taken;
- The resident is currently on a regular diet with thin liquids.
Review of the resident's care plan, initiated 1/17/24, showed:
- The resident had diabetes mellitus;
- Offer substitutes for foods not eaten;
- Offer between meal snacks every shift.
During an interview on 1/23/24 at 7:18 P.M., the resident said:
- He/She did not think the staff offered him/her a snack at bedtime;
- He/She would take a snack at bedtime if it was offered.
4. Review of Resident #36's annual MDS, dated [DATE], showed:
- Cognitive skills intact;
- Independent with eating;
- Diagnoses included dementia and Alzheimer's disease.
Review of the resident's care plan, revised 1/9/24, showed:
- The resident eats in his/her room and is on a regular diet;
- The resident is to receive double portions on all meals;
- Help open up containers and cut up food if needed;
- The resident has a history of significant weight fluctuations;
- Continue current liberalized diet order;
- The resident receives regular diet with thin liquids.
During an interview on 1/23/24 at 7:39 P.M., the resident said:
- The staff do not pass snacks to him/her each night;
- If he/she wanted a snack, he/she would have to ask for it.
5. Review of Resident #38's admission MDS, dated [DATE], showed:
- Cognitive skills intact;
- Independent with eating;
- Had seven insulin injections;
- Diagnoses included diabetes mellitus and stroke.
Review of the resident's care plan, revised 1/2/24, showed:
- The resident had an ADL self-care performance deficit related to limited mobility;
- The resident is able to feed him/herself. Eats in the dining room or his/her room and is on a regular diet with thin liquids;
- The resident has diabetes mellitus;
- Discuss meal times, portion sizes, dietary restrictions, and snacks allowed in daily nutritional plan.
During an interview on 1/23/24 at 2:44 P.M., the resident said:
- The staff do not offer him/her a snack at bedtime;
- If he/she wanted a snack, he/she would have to ask for one;
- He/she would take one if it was offered.
6. Observation on 1/23/24 at 8:00 P.M., of the clean utility room showed:
- In the refrigerator, there was a tray with two 1/2 peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, 10 oatmeal cream pies, four small bags of grapes, and one package of cheese and crackers;
Observation from 1/23/24 at 8:00 P.M., until 8:30 P.M., showed no snacks were passed.
7. During an interview on 1/27/24 at 9:24 A.M., LPN C said:
- The staff are supposed to go room to room and pass bedtime snacks;
- Dietary brings the snacks for bedtime and puts them in the refrigerator;
- He/She was not for sure if they send out enough snacks for all the residents on the hall;
- He/She did not know if the staff documented the bedtime snacks.
During an interview on 1/27/24 at 9:42 A.M. LPN F said:
- Snacks are offered in the evenings;
- Snacks should be passed in the evenings;
- Residents should receive a snack if they wanted one;
- Snack pass should be documented.
During an interview on 1/29/24 at 3:30 P.M., LPN B said:
- The dietary staff usually bring a cart out with the bedtime snacks on them;
- The Certified Nurse Aides (CNAs) usually pass them around 7:00 P.M. and they document them in the electronic records;
- Each side (North and South hall) get a cart and there's only enough snacks for each hall.
During an observation and interview on 1/29/24 at 3:50 P.M., the Dietary Manager (DM) said:
- He/She put a tray of snacks in the refrigerator on the South hall. It contained: 16 meat and cheese sandwiches, 18 peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, 24 applesauce and puddings, seven small bags of grapes, and ten packages of bear claws;
- He/She brought a tray of snacks and placed them in the refrigerator around 9:00 A.M. - 10:00 A.M.;
- The Dietary Aide should check after dinner to make sure there's plenty of snacks on the tray for the staff to pass at bedtime, if there's not enough, it should be replenished.
During an interview on 1/29/24 at 4:09 P.M., CNA A said:
- Sometimes the night Charge Nurse (CN) will go into the kitchen to get bedtime snacks;
- The snacks are on a tray in the South refrigerator and they are for the North and South halls;
- Normally none of the dietary staff add any snacks to the tray;
- Don't usually have puree snacks;
- He/she felt like there was only enough snacks for one hall, but not both halls;
- If a resident took a snack, it should be documented in the resident's electronic record.
During an interview on 1/29/24 at 4:30 P.M., CNA B said:
- Bedtime snacks are normally passed throughout the evening shift around 8:00 P.M.;
- There's not always enough snacks to pass;
- There's only a snack tray on the South hall and usually there's not enough snacks for all the residents;
- It's rare if there's enough snacks for all the residents on both halls;
- He/she documented in the resident's electronic record;
- He/she would put NA if there were not any snacks to pass.
During an interview on 1/27/24 at 12:45 P.M., the Administrator said:
- Dietary staff leaves snacks in the evening in the clean utility fridge on the South hall;
- Staff are supposed to pass evening snacks;
- Dietary usually sends out a big tray of sandwiches and a tray under it with pudding cups, or fruit, or left over desserts from dinner;
- Staff should be documenting snacks being passed in electronic medical records;
- There should be enough snacks for all residents on all halls.
CONCERN
(E)
Potential for Harm - no one hurt, but risky conditions existed
Food Safety
(Tag F0812)
Could have caused harm · This affected multiple residents
Based on observation, interviews, and record review, the facility failed to ensure staff stored food in a sanitary manner and to maintain the kitchen in a sanitary manner. The food facility census was...
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Based on observation, interviews, and record review, the facility failed to ensure staff stored food in a sanitary manner and to maintain the kitchen in a sanitary manner. The food facility census was 72.
Review of the facility's General Sanitation of the Kitchen Policy, dated, 2021, showed:
-Food and nutrition services will maintain the sanitation of the kitchen through a comprehensive cleaning schedule;
-Cleaning tasks will be outlined in a written cleaning schedule;
-Employees will be trained on how to perform cleaning tasks.
Review of the facility's Cleaning of the Microwave Oven Policy, dated 2021, showed:
-The microwave oven will be kept clean, sanitized and odor free;
-The microwave oven interior should be cleaned after each use and as needed and at a minimum, after each meal service.
Review of the facility's Food Storage Policy, dated 2021, showed:
-The facility will keep foods safe, wholesome, and appetizing;
-Food will be stored in an area that is clean, dry and free from contaminants;
-Storage areas will be free from rodent and insect infestation and will be treated for pests on a regular schedule;
-Plastic storage containers with tight-fitting covers or resealable plastic bags must be used for storing grain products, sugar, dried vegetables and broken lots of bulk foods or opened packages;
-All containers or storage bags must be legible, accurately labeled and dated.
Observation of the kitchen on 1/25/24 at 10:22 A.M., showed:
- A cockroach crawling from under the steam table;
- Ceiling vents cover in dirt and debris;
- The inside of the microwave covered with food debris;
The walk in cooler showed:
- An open package of sausage patties with no date;
- An open package of mixed vegetables with no date;
The dry storage showed:
-A cockroach crawling across the floor.
During an interview on 1/25/24 at 1:30 P.M., [NAME] A said:
-The microwave should be kept clean, sanitized and odor free;
-All the kitchen staff work on cleaning the kitchen, there is no set schedule;
-The vents in the kitchen should be clean and free of debris;
- Food should be stored in a closed container and labeled with an open date on it;
-There should not be any pests or insects in the kitchen;
-The kitchen staff set out roach traps and the problem is better than it was;
-An exterminator came and sprayed, but he/she could not remember when.
During an interview on 1/25/24 at 1:45 P.M., the DM said:
-The microwave should be kept clean, sanitized and odor free;
-All the kitchen staff work on cleaning the kitchen, there is no set schedule;
-The vents in the kitchen should be clean and free of debris;
-The maintenance department is in charge of that and he/she told the maintenance department the vents needed cleaned;
- Food should be stored in a closed container with an open date on it;
-There should not be any pests or insects in the kitchen;
-The kitchen staff set out roach traps and the problem is better than it was;
-An exterminator treated for the roaches last week, but he/she could not find the invoice.
During an interview on 1/25/24, at 3:05 P.M., the Maintenance Director said:
-He/she is in charge of cleaning the air vents in the kitchen;
-He/she said he/she just cleaned them;
-He/she did not know they were dirty again.
During an interview on 1/25/24, at 2:26 P.M., the Administrator said:
-The kitchen should be clean and in good repair;
-Food should be stored in a sanitary manner;
-The kitchen should be free of pests and rodents.
CONCERN
(E)
Potential for Harm - no one hurt, but risky conditions existed
Deficiency F0849
(Tag F0849)
Could have caused harm · This affected multiple residents
2 . Review of Resident #34's quarterly Minimum Data Set (MDS, a federally mandated assessment completed by the facility staff), dated 11/23/23, showed:
-The resident had severe cognitive impairment;
-...
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2 . Review of Resident #34's quarterly Minimum Data Set (MDS, a federally mandated assessment completed by the facility staff), dated 11/23/23, showed:
-The resident had severe cognitive impairment;
- The resident was admitted to hospice services on 8/22/23.
Review of the resident's Hospice care plan, dated 8/22/23, showed:
- The resident chose hospice services;
- Hospice will prove support for coping with grief and loss;
- The resident would remain comfortable;
- The facility staff were supposed to assess the resident for pain control, restlessness, and agitation.
Review of the undated Coordination Long-Term Care document showed:
- Hospice was supposed to visit two times per week to provide showers and nurse assessments.
The facility did not provide a hospice agreement contract with the resident's hospice service provider.
During an interview on SSD said the facility did not have a current contract with the resident's hospice service provider.
3. During an interview on 1/25/24 at 9:18 A.M., the Administrator said:
-There should be a hospice agreement with the hospice provider for each resident on hospice;
-He/she usually asks for the agreements and they send them over, but he/she missed getting the agreements.
Based on record review and interview, the facility failed to secure hospice agreements for two of 18 sampled residents (Resident #26 and #34). The facility census was 72.
Review of the hospice program policy, dated July 2017, showed:
- Hospice providers who contract with the facility must have a written agreement with the facility outlining the responsibilities of the facility and the hospice agency.
1. Review of Resident #26's quarterly Minimum Data Set (MDS, a federally mandated assessment completed by the facility staff), dated 11/23/23, showed:
- Brief Interview for Mental status (BIMS) score of 15, indicating no cognitive impairment;
- Diagnoses included: Abnormal weight loss, muscle weakness and depression;
- The resident was admitted to hospice services on 8/29/23.
Review of the resident's Hospice care plan, dated 8/30/23, showed:
- The resident chose hospice services;
- Hospice will prove support for coping with grief and loss;
- The resident would remain comfortable;
- The facility staff were supposed to assess the resident for pain control, restlessness, and agitation.
Review of the undated Coordination Long-Term Care document showed Hospice was supposed to visit two times per week to provide showers and nurse assessments.
The facility did not provide a hospice agreement contract with the resident's hospice service provider.
During an interview on 1/25/24 at 10:19 A.M., the Social Services Director (SSD) said the facility did not have a current contract with the resident's hospice service provider.
CONCERN
(E)
Potential for Harm - no one hurt, but risky conditions existed
Infection Control
(Tag F0880)
Could have caused harm · This affected multiple residents
**NOTE- TERMS IN BRACKETS HAVE BEEN EDITED TO PROTECT CONFIDENTIALITY** 6 .During an interview on 1/29/24 at 4:09 P.M., CNA A said:
- He/she should wash his/her hands when he/she enters the resident'...
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**NOTE- TERMS IN BRACKETS HAVE BEEN EDITED TO PROTECT CONFIDENTIALITY** 6 .During an interview on 1/29/24 at 4:09 P.M., CNA A said:
- He/she should wash his/her hands when he/she enters the resident's room, after removing gloves, after you throw trash in the barrels, between glove changes and before you leave the resident's room;
- It would depend on what kind of fecal material the resident had if you needed to change your gloves and wash your hands;
- You can leave the same gloves on that you use to clean fecal material and then put a clean brief on the resident.
During an interview on 1/29/24 at 4:30 P.M., CNA B said:
- He/she should wash his/her hands after taking gloves off, after providing cares, before leaving the resident's room, and after cleaning fecal material;
- If he/she has already washed his/her hands prior to entering the resident's room, he/she does not need to wash his/her hands again;
- He/she should wash his/her hands between dirty and clean tasks.
During an interview on 1/26/24 at 3:27 P.M. the Administrator said:
- She was the current Infection Control Preventionist (ICP) for the facility;
- She expected staff to wash their hands when they enter and exit a resident's room, when the staffs hands were visibly dirty;
- Using ABHR is accepted when the staffs hands were not visibly dirty.
During an interview on 1/27/24, at 12:45 P.M., the DON said:
-Staff should wipe from front to back when providing peri care;
-Staff should not wipe directly into an open wound;
-When gloves are visibly soiled with feces the staff should remove the soiled gloves, wash their hands with soap and water and apply clean gloves;
- If hands were not visibly soiled, staff may use hand sanitizer for approximately 20 seconds;
- Staff should wash their hands every time they remove their gloves;
- Staff should wash their hands anytime they are transitioning from clean to dirty tasks, enter a room, between glove changes;
- She expected staff to adhere to sterile technique when changing a PICC dressing.
During an interview on 1/27/24, at 12:50 P.M., the Administrator said:
-Staff should wipe from front to back when providing peri care;
-Staff should not wipe directly into an open wound;
-When gloves are visibly soiled with feces the staff should remove the soiled gloves, wash their hands with soap and water and apply clean gloves.
5. Review of Resident #322's admission MDS, dated [DATE], showed:
-Moderate cognitive impairment;
-Dependent on staff for ADLs;
-Dependent on staff for turning and repositioning;
-Pressure reliving devices in chair and bed;
-At risk for pressure ulcers;
-One unhealed pressure area;
--Always incontinent of bowel and bladder;
-Has a central line (thin tube that is inserted into a vein in the arm, leg or neck for access to the large central veins near the heart);
-Dependent on staff for mobility:
-Diagnosis included, osteomyelitis (a serious infection of the bone), end stage kidney disease, non-pressure chronic ulcer of back, Down Syndrome (a genetic chromosomal disorder that can a cause causing lifelong intellectual disability and developmental delays), diabetes mellitus (a metabolic disease, involving inappropriately elevated blood glucose levels), peripheral vascular disease (progressive circulation disorder caused by narrowing, blockage or spasms in a blood vessel), and atrial fibrillation (a type of abnormal heartbeat).
Review of the resident's care plan, dated 1/17/24, showed:
-Resident has ADL self-care performance deficit related to impaired balance and limited mobility;
-Resident is incontinent of bowel and bladder;
-Resident to be checked every 2 hours and as needed for incontinent every shift;
-The resident has actual impairment to skin integrity of the left buttock related to wound;
-Check the resident's skin daily while providing cares to the resident and notify the nurse of any areas of skin break down;
-Monitor and document location, size and treatment of skin injury, report failure to heal or signs and symptoms of infection to the physician;
-Resident to be turned or repositioned every 2 hours when in bed and in chair;
-Ensure resident is not laying on left buttocks wound use pillows to shift resident's weight and prevent further skin breakdown;
-Resident needs pressure relieving/reducing device while up in chair;
-Resident needs pressure relieving/reducing mattress while in bed.
Observation and interview on 1/23/24 at 7:26 P.M., showed:
-CNA B and NA A transferred the resident to the bed with the mechanical lift;
-CNA B removed the resident's brief and provided incontinent care;
-CNA B and NA A positioned the resident on his/her left side;
-CNA B washed his/her hands and applied clean gloves. CNA B used a wipe and wiped feces into the resident's open wound;
-CNA B's gloves were covered in feces and continued to wipe clean the resident's buttocks with a wipe;
-CNA B took the dirty brief and removed it from underneath the resident.
During an interview on 1/23/24 at 7:45 P.M., CNA B A said:
-He/she should not wipe feces into the resident's wound;
-He/she should remove gloves that have feces on them, wash hands, and apply clean gloves before continuing peri care.
Observation and interview on 1/24/24 at 5:20 P.M., showed:
-LPN D came into the resident's room with gloved hands, holding a bottle of wound cleanser in one hand and a bandage and gauze in the other hand;
-LPN D did not wash his/her hands or apply clean gloves before he/she started wound care;
-LPN D set the wound cleanser, gauze, and dressing on the resident's bed sheet;
-The wound was red and had yellow/green drainage coming from it;
-LPN D cleansed the wound with wound cleanser, patted dry with gauze;
-LPN D put gauze in the wound bed and touched the wound bed with his/her gloved hand;
-With the same gloved hands, LPN D applied an adhesive border gauze dressing to the wound;
-LPN D did not wash his/her hands or apply clean gloves after cleansing the wound and before touching the wound bed bed and applying the clean dressing.
During an interview on 1/24/24, at 6:10 P.M., LPN D said:
-He/she should have washed his/her hands and applied clean gloves before he/she started wound care;
-He/she should not have used the same gloves that he/she wore into the resident's room to treat the resident's wound;
-He/she should have washed his/her hands and applied clean gloves before he/she started wound care;
-He/she should have set the wound cleanser, gauze and dressing on a clean field, not on the resident's bed;
-He/she should have used a cotton tipped applicator instead of his/her gloved finger, to put gauze in the wound bed.
Observation and interview on 1/27/24 at 10:27 A.M. showed:
-LPN A washed his/her hands and applied clean gloves;
-LPN A set a paper towel on the bedside table;
-LPN A set the wound cleanser, Santyl (used to treat wounds) on the paper towel and then removed the Calcium Alginate (wound packing) from the sterile packaging and placed it on the barrier;
-LPN A removed two cotton tipped applicators from the sterile package and placed them on the barrier;
-LPN A removed the dressing and CNA D cleaned the resident;
-LPN A placed Santyl on the wound bed nickel thick and with the nonsterile cotton tipped applicator loosely packed the wound with the nonsterile Calcium Alginate strip then covered the wound with a bordered foam dressing;
LPN A said he/she should have opened the sterile Calcium Alginate and sterile cotton tipped applicators as he/she needed them.
Based on observations, interviews, and record review, the facility failed to maintain and infection control program to help prevent the spread of infections when the facility staff failed to adhere to hand hygiene practices during wound treatments, PICC line dressing changes, and incontinence care and when staff did not set the wound care supplies on a clean field. This deficient practice affected five out of 18 sampled residents (Resident #13, #15, #35, #38, and #322).The facility census was 72.
Review of the hand hygiene policy, dated August 2015, showed:
- All staff were to be trained regularly on the importance of hand hygiene in preventing the transmission of health chare associated infections;
- All staff shall follow the hand hygiene procedure to help prevent the spread of infections to other staff and residents;
- Wash hands with soap and water when your hands are visibly soiled and after contact with a resident with a known infection;
- Use alcohol- based hand rub (ABHR) before and after coming onto duty, before and after direct contact with residents, before preparing medications;
- Before and after handling urinary catheter and intravenous (IV) access sites;
- Before putting on sterile gloves;
- After removing gloves;
- Before and after assisting a resident with meals;
- Hand hygiene is the final step after removing and disposing of personal protective equipment (PPE).
Review of the perineal care policy, dated February 2018, showed:
- The staff are to wipe the resident from front to back;
- The staff are to separate the bikini area folds and wipe front to back.
1. Review of resident #15's quarterly Minimum Data Set (MDS, a federally mandated assessment completed by the facility staff), dated 1/10/24, showed:
- He/She had BIMS score of 14, indicating no cognitive impairment;
- Diagnoses included: Urinary Tract Infection (UTI), diabetes (a disease in which the body does not process blood sugar properly), kidney disease, and depression;
- Dependent on staff to use the toilet, get dressed, and showering;
- Frequently incontinent of urine and always incontinent of bowel.
Review of the comprehensive care plan, dated 8/11/23, showed:
- Resident was incontinent of bowel and bladder;
- Resident required assistance using the toilet, showering, and getting dressed;
- Monitor the resident for signs and symptoms of UTI.
Review of the Physician's Order Sheet (POS), dated January 2024, showed:
- 1/4/24 Assess the PICC site in the right upper extremity (RUE) for redness, drainage and infiltration (dislodgement). Notify the physician if the resident had increased pain, swelling, increased drainage, or fever above 101 degrees, every shift;
- 1/4/24 Change transparent dressing (no gauze under the transparent dressing), every Wednesday on day shift and as needed if the dressing became soiled or loosened;
- 1/23/24 Meropenem (strong antibiotic used to treat UTI), IV solution reconstituted, give 1 gram per IV one time daily for seven days. Run the IV over a three hour time frame.
Observation on 1/24/24 at 2:40 P.M., showed:
- Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN) B entered the resident's room with a sterile PICC dressing kit;
- He/She did not wash his/her hands, opened the PICC dressing kit, put on non-sterile gloves, and removed the old PICC line dressing;
- He/She removed his/her gloves, washed his/her hands, picked up the trash can full of trash touching the liner with his/her bare hands;
- LPN B opened the sterile drape, placed it on the resident at the PICC line insertion site with his/her bare hands;
- He/She put on sterile gloves, opened the package that contained the cotton tipped swab with sterile cleaning solution;
- LPN B made multiple swipes from the insertion site out in a circular motion approximately two inches and then made a circular motion from the outside parameter to the insertion site with two swabs.
- LPN B's left sterile gloved hand touched the resident's bare skin, LPN B then touched the sterile field with his/her left hand and continued with the dressing change without changing his/her sterile gloves;
- LPN B placed a new transparent dressing on the PICC insertion site.
During an interview on 1/25/24 at 11:09 A.M. LPN B said:
- He/She was trained how to complete PICC line dressing changes while in nursing school;
- He/She had not completed a PICC line dressing change in the past;
- He/She knew he/she should have changed his/her sterile gloves and should not have cleaned from the clean side towards the insertion site.
2. Review of Resident #13's annual MDS, dated [DATE], showed:
- He/She had a BIMS score of 12, indicating minimal cognitive deficit;
- He/She was incontinent of bowel and bladder;
- He/She required the assistance of two staff transfer, bed mobility, use the toilet, dressing;
- Diagnoses included: Anxiety, pain and weakness.
Review of the resident's POS, dated January 2024, showed:
- 11/20/23: Cleanse the abdominal folds with wound cleanser, apply antifungal cream and collagen particles (a powder to promote the growth of new tissue) to the abdominal folds daily;
- 1/19/24: Cleanse the right outer ankle with wound cleaner, apply Santyl (a medication that removes dead tissue) to the wound bed and cover with a bordered gauze (a type of dressing that absorbs minimal drainage and has adhesive surrounding it) one time daily.
Observation on 1/24/24 at 4:08 P.M., showed:
- LPN B entered the resident's room; He/she did not wash his/her hands or perform hand hygiene. He/she put on gloves;
- LPN B cleaned the resident's abdominal folds with wound cleanser and applied the ordered antifungal cream with collagen powder to the resident's abdominal folds;
- LPN B changed his/her gloves, but did not wash or sanitize his/her hands;
- He/She removed the old dressing from the resident's right outer ankle, cleansed the wound with with wound cleanser, applied Santyl and a border gauze to the wound;
- LPN B removed his/her gloves after he/she completed the wound dressing and washed his/her hands.
During an interview on 1/25/24 at 11:09 A.M., LPN B said:
- He/She should have performed hand hygiene each time he/she changed his/her gloves when he/she provided wound care to Resident #13.
- He/She should have performed hand hygiene when he/she entered the resident's room to provide cares.
3. Review of Resident #35's quarterly MDS, dated [DATE], showed:
- Cognitive skills intact;
- Dependent on the assistance of staff for toilet use, transfers, and dressing;
- Had a Foley catheter (sterile tube inserted into the bladder to drain urine);
- Always incontinent of bowel;
- Diagnoses included congestive heart failure (accumulation of fluid in the lungs and other areas of the body), high blood pressure, diabetes mellitus, depression and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD, obstruction of air flow that interferes with normal breathing).
Review of the resident's care plan, revised 12/26/23, showed:
- Alteration in activities of daily living (ADL) mobility related to bilateral lower extremity pain due to neuropathy (weakness, numbness and pain from nerve damage) and diabetes mellitus;
- Required the assistance of two staff with bed mobility. He/she is to be turned every two hours when in bed;
- The resident had functional incontinence of bowel and bladder related to age and obesity;
- Provide every two hour checks and as needed, change the incontinent pad if needed, clean and dry skin thoroughly and apply moisture barrier after each incontinent episode;
- Provide prompt attention to incontinent episodes.
Observation on 1/24/24 at 3:40 P.M., showed:
-CNA A and CNA B entered the resident's room, did not wash their hands and applied gloves;
- CNA B provided incontinent care with fecal material noted and did not wash his/her hands or change gloves after cleaning the fecal material;
-CNA B used a wipe to clean fecal material from his/her gloved hand and did not wash his/her hands or change gloves;
- CNA B continued with incontinent care then removed his/her gloves, did not wash his/her hands, applied new gloves, and continued with incontinent care;
- CNA B placed a clean incontinent brief on the resident, turned the resident side to side and placed the lift pad under the resident with the same gloved hands;
- CNA B removed his/her gloves and did not wash his/her hands;
- CNA A and CNA B used the mechanical lift and transferred the resident from the bed to his/her wheelchair;
- CNA A and CNA B did not wash their hands before they left the resident's room.
4. Review of Resident #38's admission MDS, dated [DATE], showed:
- Cognitive skills intact;
- Dependent on the assistance of staff for toilet use;
- Substantial assistance of staff for transfers;
- Always continent of urine;
- Occasionally incontinent of bowel;
- Diagnoses included stroke, anxiety, COPD, and hemiplegia (paralysis affecting one side of the body).
Review of the resident's care plan, revised 1/2/24 showed:
- The resident was continent of bowel and bladder;
- The resident used a bedside commode (portable toilet) and urinal for toileting. He/she required the assistance of two staff with the use of gait belt (a special belt placed around the resident's waist to provide a handle to hold onto during a transfer) and walker. Please assist the resident with toileting and cleaning skin thoroughly after all toileting. Change brief, clothing and linens if needed as resident does have occasional incontinence noted. Resident to be checked every two hours and as needed every shift for incontinence. Encourage resident to use call light for assistance with toileting.
Observation on 1/23/24 at 2:19 P.M., showed:
- CNA A and CNA B entered the resident's room, did not wash their hands and applied gloves;
- CNA A picked the trash can up with his/her gloved hands and placed it beside the bed;
- CNA A unfastened the incontinent brief with liquid fecal material in the front and the back of the incontinent brief;
- CNA A wiped each side of the resident's legs with fecal material;
- CNA A removed gloves, did not wash his/her hands, and applied new gloves;
- CNA A used multiple wipes and wiped the fecal material from the resident;
- CNA A and CNA B turned the resident on his/her side;
- CNA A used multiple wipes and wiped the resident's buttocks with fecal material on the wipes.
- CNA A put a clean pair of pants on the resident and pulled them up to his/her ankles;
- CNA B left to get another package of wipes;
- CNA A bagged the trash;
- CNA A used the same gloved hands and looked in the resident's closet for a different shirt;
- CNA B returned to the room with wipes;
- CNA A used a new wipe wiped fecal material from the top of the inner leg to the groin;
- CNA A and CNA B turned the resident on his/her side;
- CNA A used a new wipe and wiped on each side of the buttock with fecal material;
- With the same gloves CNA B removed the soiled liquid incontinent brief, removed the soiled fitted sheet and placed a clean incontinent brief on the resident;
- With the same gloves CNA A and CNA B turned the resident from side to side and pulled his/her pants up, and moved the resident up in bed;
- CNA A removed gloves, did not wash his/her hands, applied new gloves, bagged the soiled linens and trash and left the room with them;
- CNA B covered the resident with a sheet, removed his/her gloves, did not wash his/her hands and left the room.
CONCERN
(F)
Potential for Harm - no one hurt, but risky conditions existed
Deficiency F0841
(Tag F0841)
Could have caused harm · This affected most or all residents
Based on record review and interview, the facility failed to designate a physician to serve as the medical director. The facility census was 72.
Review of the facility's policy for medical director, ...
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Based on record review and interview, the facility failed to designate a physician to serve as the medical director. The facility census was 72.
Review of the facility's policy for medical director, revised July 2016, showed:
- Physician services shall be under the supervision of the medical director;
- The medical director is a licensed physician in this state and is responsible for: ensuring adequate and appropriate physician services; reviewed practitioner credentials and overseeing physicians and those who perform physician-delegated tasks; reviewing physician performance and providing feedback to try to improve performance; overseeing and helping develop and implement care-related policies and practices; participating in efforts to improve quality of care and services; serving as a liaison with the community; and serving as a source of education, training, and information;
- Medical director functions also include, but are not limited to : acting as a liaison between administration and attending physicians; acting as a consultant to the director of nursing services in matters relating to resident care services; helping assure that the resident care plan accurately reflects the medical regimen; participating in staff meetings concerning infection prevention and control, quality assurance and performance improvement, antibiotic stewardship, pharmaceutical services, resident care policies, etc.; assisting with employee health issues and concerns; and assuring that physician services comply with current rules, regulations, and guidelines concerning long-term care.
Review of the facility's Quality Assurance and Performance Improvement (QAPI) notes, dated 1/27/24 at 10:15 A.M., showed:
- The documentation did not show the medical director was in attendance for any of the meetings.
During an interview on 1/27/24 at 10:18 A.M., the Administrator said:
- Physician A had not signed the contract to be the Medical Director;
- The facility had not terminated their agreement with Physician B, but they had not offered him/her a new contract when the new management had taken over.
CONCERN
(F)
Potential for Harm - no one hurt, but risky conditions existed
Deficiency F0868
(Tag F0868)
Could have caused harm · This affected most or all residents
Based on interviews and record review, the facility failed to maintain a quality assessment and assurance (QAA) committee that contains the minimum required members. The facility census was 72.
Review...
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Based on interviews and record review, the facility failed to maintain a quality assessment and assurance (QAA) committee that contains the minimum required members. The facility census was 72.
Review of the facility Quality Assurance and Performance Improvement (QAPI) Program Policy, dated February 2020, showed:
- This facility shall develop, implement, and maintain an ongoing, facility-wide, data-driven QAPI program that is focused on indicators of the outcomes of care and quality of life for residents;
- The QAPI program will provide a means to measure current and potential indicators for outcomes of care and quality of life;
- The QAPI program will provide a means to establish and implement performance improvement projects to correct identified negative or problematic indicators;
- The QAPI program will reinforce and build upon effective systems and processes related to the delivery of quality care and services;
- The QAPI program will establish systems through which to monitor and evaluate corrective actions;
- The owner and/or governing board (body) of our facility is ultimately responsible for the QAPI program;
- The administrator is responsible for assuring this facility's QAPI program complies with federal, state, and local regulatory agency requirements.
The facility did not provide a policy regarding their QAA committee.
Review of an undated document provided by the facility labeled Monthly Meetings QAPI Members showed:
- The following unnamed members Administrator, Director of Nursing, MDS Coordinator, Maintenance, Housekeeping/Laundry, Marketing, Business Office, Therapy, and Medical Director/or Physician.
Review of minutes from the monthly QAPI meetings from January of 2023 to January of 2024 showed:
- Meeting conducted in the months of January 2023, February 2023, April 2023, May 2023, June 2023, July 2023, October 2023, November 2023, December 2023, and January 2024 without a medical director present.
During an interview on 1/27/24 at 10:18 A.M., the Administrator said:
- Physician B is the facility's medical director;
- Physician B has not attended any meetings;
- Physician A is invited to come to QAPI meetings, because he/she practices for most residents in the facility;
- Physician A was sent an email for the October 2023 meeting, however no documentation exists to show he/she reviewed the meeting;
- The facility's medical director should attend QAPI/QAA meetings.