Inaccurate MDS Coding for Restraints, Falls, and UTI Documentation
Summary
The facility failed to accurately code the Minimum Data Set (MDS) assessments for multiple residents, resulting in deficiencies related to restraints, fall assessments, and urinary tract infection (UTI) documentation. Specifically, seven residents were incorrectly coded as having physical restraints due to the use of side rails or enabler bars, which, according to observations and interviews, did not impede the residents' mobility or ability to exit the bed. The MDS Coordinator admitted to coding these devices as restraints out of caution, despite the devices not meeting the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) definition of a physical restraint. The MDS consultant also acknowledged a misunderstanding of the restraint definition and confirmed that no training or audits had been conducted to ensure accurate MDS coding. Additionally, the facility failed to accurately document falls for three residents. In each case, the residents experienced falls, some resulting in injury, but these incidents were not properly coded in the subsequent MDS assessments. Interviews with the MDS Coordinator revealed that these omissions were due to oversight during the MDS completion process, and there was no evidence of a review or audit process by the facility's MDS consultant company to catch such errors. The facility also failed to accurately code a UTI for one resident. Despite clear documentation in the medical record, including physician orders for antibiotics and hospital discharge lab results confirming a UTI, the MDS did not reflect that the resident had experienced a UTI in the last 30 days. The MDS Coordinator stated that the omission was due to not finding the relevant lab results in the hospital discharge report at the time of MDS completion. These inaccuracies in MDS coding increased the potential for missed opportunities for care or services for the affected residents.
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