F0686 F686: Provide appropriate pressure ulcer care and prevent new ulcers from developing.
D

Failure to Provide Comprehensive Pressure Injury Prevention, Assessment, and Treatment

Wheaton Franciscan Hc - Terrace At St FrancisMilwaukee, Wisconsin Survey Completed on 01-06-2026

Summary

The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide pressure injury prevention and treatment consistent with professional standards of practice for one hospice resident with multiple comorbidities, including primary progressive MS, chronic kidney disease, osteoporosis, severe protein-calorie malnutrition, and cirrhosis. The resident was always incontinent of bowel and bladder and had a prior history of a stage 3 coccyx pressure injury that had healed earlier in the year. The care plan identified the resident as at risk for pressure ulcers and included general interventions such as encouraging peri hygiene with barrier cream after incontinence, observing skin for redness and breakdown, use of a low air loss mattress, heel floating, use of a pressure-relieving cushion, turning and repositioning during rounding, and use of a lift sheet. However, the care plan did not specify person-centered details such as the frequency of turning and repositioning or how often the resident should be checked and changed for incontinence, despite documentation that the resident was always incontinent. A new facility-acquired pressure injury to the sacrum/coccyx was identified on 12/11/25, documented as a full-thickness wound measuring 1.0 x 0.5 cm. The skin assessment summary did not include a comprehensive assessment: depth was not documented, wound bed color was marked as inapplicable, and the stage was entered as “Further assessment required.” Treatment ordered at that time was to cleanse with normal saline and apply zinc covered with a foam dressing, and a hospice nurse note indicated a new order for cleansing with normal saline, barrier cream to non-open areas, and Mepilex dressing. The December TAR showed the Mepilex treatment every three days was signed as completed through the end of the month. There was no comprehensive hospice documentation of the wound, and the resident’s care plan was not revised to reflect the new pressure injury or to add new, individualized interventions. An RN later stated that when new wounds are found, staff “just measure it” and “don’t stage wounds,” and there was no documentation of wound characteristics such as appearance or exudate at the time of discovery. On 12/18/25, the wound physician assessed the sacral wound and documented it as an unstageable full-thickness pressure injury due to necrosis, measuring 7 cm x 10 cm with moderate serous exudate and 20% thick adherent devitalized necrotic tissue. The physician ordered a dressing regimen including daily calcium alginate and collagen powder with a gauze island border dressing. The facility did not correctly transcribe these orders to the TAR: collagen powder was omitted, and both the original Mepilex every-three-days treatment and the new daily alginate regimen were signed out as completed concurrently. Staff did not clarify with the wound physician which treatment should be discontinued. An LPN later reported she had only been performing the three-times-weekly border dressing, had not been using the calcium alginate because the resident complained it burned, and had not contacted the wound physician; there was no documentation that any physician was notified that the ordered treatment was not being followed. Weekly comprehensive wound assessments and measurements were not consistently completed by an RN in the absence of the wound physician; the next documented assessment with measurements after 12/18/25 did not occur until 12/29/25, was entered by an LPN, and repeated the physician’s prior measurements and description. The DON acknowledged that nurses were only verbally told to assess wounds when the wound doctor would not be present and that there was no formal assignment or sign-out process for these weekly assessments.

Penalty

No penalty information released
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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

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See other F0686 citations
Failure to Implement Wound Specialist Orders for Unstageable Heel Pressure Ulcer
G
F0686 F686: Provide appropriate pressure ulcer care and prevent new ulcers from developing.
Short Summary

A resident with dementia, anemia, impaired mobility, and a high Braden risk score developed an in-house acquired right heel pressure injury that progressed to an unstageable ulcer with eschar, slough, malodor, and increasing size. Although a wound specialist repeatedly evaluated the wound, performed debridements, and issued updated orders to change from betadine and foam dressing to specific regimens using Vashe, medical-grade honey, and later 0.125% Dakin’s solution with dampened gauze and silicone foam adhesive dressings, staff continued to provide only the original betadine and foam treatment. Review of the TAR showed the specialist’s later orders were never implemented, and the DON confirmed the wound care recommendations were not followed, during which time the wound deteriorated and caused actual harm.

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 Obtain Timely Wound Consultation and Implement Ordered Pressure Ulcer Treatments
G
F0686 F686: Provide appropriate pressure ulcer care and prevent new ulcers from developing.
Short Summary

A resident with multiple comorbidities was admitted with an unstageable sacral pressure ulcer and placed on Medi-Honey dressings three times weekly. Over several weeks, the wound enlarged and remained covered with slough, but a wound specialist NP was not consulted until the ulcer had significantly worsened. When the NP did evaluate the wound, she performed debridements and ordered daily Dakin’s solution and later Dakin’s with Silvadene and calcium alginate, but the facility’s TAR showed staff largely continued Medi-Honey three times weekly, applied Dakin’s on only a few days, and never administered Silvadene. The wound progressed to a stage 4 ulcer with odor and signs of infection, later cultured positive for MRSA and diagnosed in the hospital as an infected stage 4 decubitus ulcer with osteomyelitis requiring surgical debridement, contrary to the facility’s own policy requiring timely reassessment and implementation of MD/NP-directed wound 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 Implement and Adjust Pressure Ulcer Prevention and Treatment Interventions
D
F0686 F686: Provide appropriate pressure ulcer care and prevent new ulcers from developing.
Short Summary

Two residents at risk for or with existing pressure ulcers did not receive appropriate, individualized pressure ulcer prevention and treatment. One resident with hemiplegia, severe cognitive impairment, total ADL dependence, and incontinence developed multiple heel and ankle wounds after initial blanchable redness was noted; ordered Prevalon boots were repeatedly unavailable, the order to use them at all times was not promptly updated in the NAR, a turning schedule was not entered into the EHR, tissue analytics were missed on a scheduled date, and a nutrition consult and initiation of ordered supplements for wound healing were significantly delayed. Another resident with a stage 2 pressure ulcer was repeatedly observed on a DermaFloat LAL mattress left on the firmest setting, and the DON confirmed staff had not followed the manufacturer’s instructions to adjust and verify the mattress setting to prevent bottoming out.

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.
Improper Infection Control During Pressure Ulcer Dressing Change
D
F0686 F686: Provide appropriate pressure ulcer care and prevent new ulcers from developing.
Short Summary

A resident with an unstageable sacral pressure ulcer and hospice status had ordered daily wound care, including cleansing with normal saline, packing with calcium alginate silver, and covering with a border foam dressing. During an observed dressing change, an LPN, while wearing clean gloves, handled a pen marker from under PPE, adjusted a scrub jacket cuff to check the time, and labeled the dressing, then used the same contaminated gloved hand to pick up the calcium alginate silver and place it into the wound bed. These actions did not follow the facility’s clean dressing change policy or infection control standards for wound 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.
Improper Aseptic Technique During Pressure Ulcer Wound Care
D
F0686 F686: Provide appropriate pressure ulcer care and prevent new ulcers from developing.
Short Summary

A resident with a stage 4 pressure injury on the right lateral lumbar region did not receive wound care consistent with aseptic technique and facility policy. An LPN placed scissors and wound supplies on a PPE cart and an uncleansed bedside table, then used the same scissors to cut silver alginate that was applied directly to the wound bed. The LPN also sprayed gauze with wound cleanser and set the wet gauze on the outside of its package, which had contacted soiled surfaces, before using it in the wound care process. The DON acknowledged that these actions could contaminate the wound and were not in accordance with the facility’s pressure injury prevention and management policy requiring evidence-based treatment to promote healing and prevent infection.

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, document, and report new pressure ulcers
D
F0686 F686: Provide appropriate pressure ulcer care and prevent new ulcers from developing.
Short Summary

Failure to assess, document, and report new pressure ulcers: A resident with a pelvic fracture and intact cognition developed stage II pressure ulcers on both inner buttocks and a new pressure ulcer on the heel. Staff interviews and record review showed the DON/wound nurse did not document the heel wound or notify the MD, did not notify the MD when the left buttock ulcer was identified, and wound monitoring was not completed daily as required by the facility's own process.

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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