F0726 F726: Ensure that nurses and nurse aides have the appropriate competencies to care for every resident in a way that maximizes each resident's well being.
K

Deficient Nursing Staff Competency and Lab Monitoring

Highland Pines Rehabilitation CenterClearwater, Florida Survey Completed on 04-17-2025

Summary

The facility failed to ensure that nursing staff were competent in caring for residents, particularly in the areas of laboratory monitoring, following through with orders, processing consultations, and communicating with physicians. This deficiency was evident in the case of a resident whose medication levels were not adequately monitored, leading to a serious medical event. The resident's medication levels were found to be low, and despite orders for consultation and lab tests, there was no evidence that these were completed or that the physician was notified of the results. The report highlights multiple instances where lab results were not communicated to the appropriate medical personnel, and orders were not followed through. For example, several residents had lab orders that were either not entered into the lab portal or not completed, resulting in missed or delayed lab tests. In some cases, critical lab results were not reported to the physician in a timely manner, if at all. This lack of communication and follow-through contributed to the deterioration of residents' conditions. Interviews with staff revealed systemic issues in the facility's lab process, including a lack of access to the lab portal for some nurses, insufficient training on lab procedures, and unclear responsibilities for ensuring lab orders were completed. The Director of Nursing acknowledged these failures, noting that there was no assigned person to oversee lab processes and that the system for managing lab orders and results was broken. This systemic failure in managing lab processes and communication with physicians led to the determination of Immediate Jeopardy.

Plan Of Correction

Competent Nurse staffing 1. What corrective action(s) will be accomplished for those residents found to have been affected by the deficient practices? Residents #5 and #10 no longer reside in the facility. Laboratory orders for medication management were received for residents #1, #2, #3, #4, #6, #7, #8, #9, and #11. Results of labs were reported to resident physicians, documented in the clinical record, and new orders were transcribed as indicated. Consult was for resident #1 as requested by physician. 2. How will you identify other residents having potential to be affected by the same practice and what corrective actions will be taken? A facility-wide audit of current residents on medications was conducted by Director of Nursing/designee to ensure that medications residents on had appropriate lab monitoring orders in place and that any consults that were previously ordered were scheduled. Any residents identified without lab monitoring orders or fully executed consults were reported to physician and new orders transcribed as indicated. 3. What measures will be put into place or what systematic changes will you make to ensure that the practice does not recur? Director of Nursing/Designee will educate licensed nursing staff on the care of residents with a diagnosis to include ensuring that lab orders are in place to monitor medication levels, physicians are notified of abnormal lab values or refused labs, documentation of physician notification of lab levels and new orders is recorded in the resident clinical record, and that consultation orders for or other outside providers are executed appropriately. 4. How the corrective action(s) will monitor to ensure the practice will not recur, i.e., what quality assurance program will be put in place(s); will be accomplished for those residents: Director of Nursing/Designee will randomly audit residents on medications to ensure that appropriate lab orders for monitoring medication levels are in place and consultation orders for outside providers are completed weekly for four weeks and then monthly for two months. Results of the audits will be submitted by the Director of Nursing/designee to the Quality Assessment, Assurance, and Compliance Committee monthly for three months for further recommendations and guidance.

Removal Plan

  • Regional Nurse Consultant educated the Administrator and Director of Nursing on ensuring proper follow-through with consultation orders, laboratory monitoring of therapeutic levels for medications, physician notification of abnormal lab values, and follow-up procedures and resident condition change related to laboratory results.
  • Current resident audit conducted by Director of Nursing/designee for review of residents taking medications with no concerns identified.
  • Consultant Physician provided education to facility Medical Director and physician extender regarding standards of practice for monitoring and treating residents with related diagnoses.
  • Director of Nursing or designee educated 100% of licensed nursing staff on ensuring proper follow-through with consultation orders, laboratory monitoring of therapeutic levels for medications, physician notification of abnormal lab values, and follow-up procedures related to laboratory results.
  • Process Change: Director of Nursing is responsible for ensuring proper follow-through with consultation orders, laboratory monitoring of therapeutic levels for medications, physician notification, and follow-up procedures related to laboratory results.
  • All education and in-service sign-in sheets were reviewed and validated 10 out of 18 licensed nursing staff on ensuring proper follow-through with consultation orders, laboratory monitoring of therapeutic levels for medications, physician notification of abnormal lab values, and follow-up procedures related to laboratory results.
  • Interviews were conducted with 10 licensed nurses across various shifts, the Assistant Director of Nursing, the DON, and the Medical Director. The staff members were able to verbalize they had been trained and were knowledgeable about the new policies.

Penalty

Fine: $179,130
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The penalty, as released by CMS, applies to the entire inspection this citation is part of, covering all citations and f-tags issued, not just this specific f-tag. For the complete original report, please refer to the 'Details' section.

Resources

Below are regulatory guidelines relevant to this citation:

See other F0726 citations
Failure to Provide Competent CPR Response and Verify Code Status for Full Code Resident
J
F0726 F726: Ensure that nurses and nurse aides have the appropriate competencies to care for every resident in a way that maximizes each resident's well being.
Short Summary

A resident with full code status was found unresponsive without respirations or pulse during the night shift. An RN and an LPN initiated CPR but did not activate EMS, and they discontinued CPR after about 20 minutes. The RN, who lacked documented orientation and competency assessment and had obtained BLS certification through a fully online, non–instructor-led course, pronounced the resident deceased without authority and later stated she believed the resident was on hospice and did not verify code status. The LPN’s BLS certification was expired, and a CNA with an expired BLS certification performed several chest compressions despite facility policy that CNAs were not to perform CPR. The RN had not participated in documented code blue drills, and leadership confirmed that required clinical orientation and skills competencies had not been completed for her, leading surveyors to determine that staff were not adequately trained or competent to respond to a cardiopulmonary arrest for a full code resident, resulting in an Immediate Jeopardy finding.

No penalty information released
tooltip icon
The penalty, as released by CMS, applies to the entire inspection this citation is part of, covering all citations and f-tags issued, not just this specific f-tag. For the complete original report, please refer to the 'Details' section.
Lack of Qualified Oversight and Documentation in Restorative Nursing Program
D
F0726 F726: Ensure that nurses and nurse aides have the appropriate competencies to care for every resident in a way that maximizes each resident's well being.
Short Summary

The facility failed to ensure that the nurse overseeing the Restorative Nursing Program had documented competencies, qualifications, or a defined job description, despite policy assigning responsibility for restorative oversight to specific clinical staff. One resident with severe dementia developed left-hand clenching and pain; the Restorative Nurse documented assessments and the possible use of a palm protector, but there was no further documentation of restorative services, no record that restorative services were in place, and no follow-up provider communication beyond an earlier notification noted by the DON. Another resident with advanced debility, chronic pain, and hand tremors had a care plan for frequent restorative services, but documentation showed repeated refusals due to pain, painful palm protector application, and lack of a consistent pain-management plan before interventions. The Restorative Nurse reported evaluating the resident and notifying the provider to discontinue restorative services, yet no supporting provider notification documentation was available, while she also stated she independently assesses and determines residents’ appropriateness for restorative services without documented restorative-specific competencies.

No penalty information released
tooltip icon
The penalty, as released by CMS, applies to the entire inspection this citation is part of, covering all citations and f-tags issued, not just this specific f-tag. For the complete original report, please refer to the 'Details' section.
Uncertified Unit Aides Performing CNA-Level Direct Care
F
F0726 F726: Ensure that nurses and nurse aides have the appropriate competencies to care for every resident in a way that maximizes each resident's well being.
Short Summary

The facility allowed uncertified Unit Aides (UAs) to perform CNA-level direct care despite job descriptions and the DON’s statements limiting UAs to non–hands-on helper tasks. Multiple alert and oriented residents reported that a UA assisted them with bed baths, incontinence care, transfers (including use of a mechanical lift), showering, and dressing. A CNA confirmed that, when short-staffed, UAs were used as additional CNAs and performed ADL care and transfers, and that another UA on nights escorted residents requiring one-person assist to the restroom. The DON stated that CNAs must be certified or enrolled in an LPN program and that UAs have no formal training requirement and should not provide resident care, while facility job descriptions showed UAs are intended only for cleaning, transport, and simple assistance at meals, and CNAs are responsible for ADLs and direct resident care.

No penalty information released
tooltip icon
The penalty, as released by CMS, applies to the entire inspection this citation is part of, covering all citations and f-tags issued, not just this specific f-tag. For the complete original report, please refer to the 'Details' section.
Failure to Perform and Document Accurate Skin Assessments for Newly Admitted Resident
D
F0726 F726: Ensure that nurses and nurse aides have the appropriate competencies to care for every resident in a way that maximizes each resident's well being.
Short Summary

A resident with aphasia and chronic kidney disease was admitted with documented redness on the right thigh and a physician order for weekly skin assessments. The admission evaluation instructed staff to complete a thorough head-to-toe skin assessment, but the next-day skilled documentation by an LVN indicated the resident had no skin conditions. Later that day, a hospital documented redness and bruising to the hip, back, and leg, and the DON reported to a hospital physician that bruising had been present on admission but had enlarged. Facility CNAs and an LVN gave inconsistent accounts of seeing or not seeing bruising, with one LVN stating she used only bathroom light and that night nurses did not typically perform full skin assessments. The DON and ADON acknowledged that admitting nurses were responsible for initial skin assessments, that staff generally did not measure skin conditions, and that a recent EMR change contributed to incomplete documentation. These actions and omissions resulted in incomplete and inaccurate skin assessment and documentation, contrary to the facility’s Skin Management policy and the physician’s orders.

No penalty information released
tooltip icon
The penalty, as released by CMS, applies to the entire inspection this citation is part of, covering all citations and f-tags issued, not just this specific f-tag. For the complete original report, please refer to the 'Details' section.
Failure to Assess, Monitor, and Notify Provider for Resident With Profuse Bleeding and Critical Lab Value
J
F0726 F726: Ensure that nurses and nurse aides have the appropriate competencies to care for every resident in a way that maximizes each resident's well being.
Short Summary

A resident with a history of circulatory surgery, an aortocoronary bypass graft, and on anticoagulant therapy experienced an acute onset of profuse rectal bleeding and shortness of breath during a night shift. An ACMA was functioning as charge on one hall while an LPN covered the other hall; the ACMA reported the resident’s bleeding and distress, and the LPN came once to the room but did not provide ongoing assessment or monitoring, later stating they were behind on work and relying on the ACMA to monitor. EMS later found the room with evidence of a significant hemorrhagic event and the resident unconscious on the toilet. Progress notes lacked documentation of significant change in condition, assessments, or interventions for the bleeding and respiratory distress, and the facility failed to notify the medical provider of a critical Hgb of 6.3 or of the acute bleeding. The facility also could not produce annual competency records for the LPN or ACMA, and the resident’s family was not notified of the change in condition or death until later.

Fine: $99,585
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The penalty, as released by CMS, applies to the entire inspection this citation is part of, covering all citations and f-tags issued, not just this specific f-tag. For the complete original report, please refer to the 'Details' section.
Failure to Maintain Nursing Staff Competency, CPR Certification, and Appropriate Emergency Response
E
F0726 F726: Ensure that nurses and nurse aides have the appropriate competencies to care for every resident in a way that maximizes each resident's well being.
Short Summary

The facility failed to ensure nursing staff maintained required competencies and responded appropriately during an emergency. Review of personnel files showed that nearly half of the CNAs lacked current CPR certification, despite job descriptions requiring CPR training and maintenance, and the DSD confirmed that CPR renewals and mock codes were not being maintained or documented. CNA competency evaluations had not been completed annually since 2024, and licensed nurse skill evaluations for an RN and several LVNs were incomplete, missing dates and signatures. One RN’s IV therapy competency was evaluated by an LVN, even though the DON stated IV therapy was outside the LVN scope, while the DON’s job description assigned her responsibility for annual competency training. In a resident emergency involving low oxygen saturation, an RN did not assess the resident, did not obtain full VS, left the bedside to call 911, and did not return or document assessments, while an LVN left the resident alone multiple times instead of using a walkie talkie, administered only 2 L/min O2 without reassessment, did not obtain BP, and failed to document pre- and post-oxygen VS, contrary to facility CPR and oxygen administration policies.

No penalty information released
tooltip icon
The penalty, as released by CMS, applies to the entire inspection this citation is part of, covering all citations and f-tags issued, not just this specific f-tag. For the complete original report, please refer to the 'Details' section.

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