Failure to Consistently Assess, Document, and Follow Up on Wounds and Skin Conditions
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide appropriate treatment and care according to orders, and to accurately and consistently assess and document skin conditions and wounds for multiple residents. For one resident with acute osteomyelitis, DM, PVD, CHF, and anemia, the medical record showed inconsistent documentation of a left heel wound, alternately described as a DM ulcer, a pressure ulcer, and a surgical site. The quarterly MDS did not document a surgical wound, despite other records indicating the presence of a left heel wound that had been debrided in the hospital and categorized as a surgical wound with serosanguinous drainage. A wound clinic note documented a left heel pressure ulcer with surgical site and sutures, but a later wound physician note contained no documentation that the facility addressed the left heel wound. For this same resident, the facility had a physician order to cleanse the left heel and apply petroleum gauze and a silicone bordered dressing three times per week and as needed, and the wound nurse confirmed that these treatments were being performed. However, the wound nurse also stated that the facility had not measured the left heel wound from the time the resident was last seen at the wound clinic until the survey date, because they relied on the wound clinic to monitor the wound. The outpatient wound RN reported that the resident was last seen at the wound clinic in mid-January for evaluation of a left heel pressure ulcer with surgical site, and that the clinic had called the facility in early March to schedule a follow-up appointment but did not receive a return call. This resulted in a lack of ongoing wound measurements and a missed follow-up wound clinic appointment for the resident’s left heel wound. Another resident, admitted with cerebral infarction with left hemiplegia, mood disorder, HTN, and epilepsy, had repeated documentation on shower sheets over multiple dates indicating redness under both breasts and in the groin area, with notes that the redness had worsened and that powder had not worked and had been present for months. Despite this, weekly skin assessments during the same period documented no skin issues. A weekly wound observation later identified fungal areas under both breasts and the belly button, but without measurements. Physician orders existed for miconazole cream under the breasts, later changed to antifungal powder, and additional orders were written for antifungal cream to the buttocks, oral Diflucan, and later Benadryl for itching. A wound NP note documented extensive fungal dermatitis under the breasts, in the groin, umbilicus, and buttocks, with erythema and odor, and provided specific measurements for several areas. The DON confirmed that weekly skin assessments in January and February did not document the rash and that no treatment was initiated for the groin or umbilical rash until late February, and also confirmed that Keflex ordered by Urgent Care for fungal infection of the skin and candidal intertrigo was not administered. A third resident with DM, Down’s Syndrome, Hirschsprung’s disease, and morbid obesity had a non-pressure wound to the left sacrum documented by a wound NP as a trauma/injury with specific measurements and moderate serous exudate and slough, later described as a full-thickness trauma wound that underwent surgical debridement. A physician order directed daily cleansing of the sacral wound and application of calcium alginate with bordered gauze, and records showed treatments were completed as ordered. However, the medical record did not contain documentation of what caused the trauma or what type of trauma occurred to the sacrum. The MDS nurse confirmed that there was no documentation in the record to identify the cause or type of trauma to the sacral area. These combined findings for three residents demonstrate failures in ongoing assessment, timely and accurate documentation, and follow-through with ordered or recommended wound-related care and evaluations.
Plan Of Correction
F684 Quality of Care The PoC will what corrective action(s) will be accomplished for those residents found to have been affected by the deficient practice. Resident #2 wound is healed per wound nurse 4-31-26.No further follow-up wound clinic appointment was needed or scheduled. Resident #10 has a treatment for rash which was ordered by the wound CNP and written by the wound nurse this order was written 3/18/26 which is demonstrating improvement and resident #51 is no longer in the facility. How you will identify other residents having the potential to be affected by the same deficient practice and what corrective action will be taken? All residents in the facility have the potential for an identified practice census of 47. A sweep of residents to include any skin and wound conditions was done by 3-25-2026 by the wound nurse and certified wound nurse practitioner. The wound nurses look for any skin issues, and the wound nurse practitioner sees all residents with any skin concerns. (treatment order was in place, follow-up appointments with wound clinic had been scheduled), accurate assessments were in place, and the cause of wound injury/trauma had been The facility has no residents requiring treatment from an outside wound clinic; all current skin/ wound conditions have been described and measured. What measures will be put into place or what systemic changes you will make to ensure that the deficient practice does not recur. DON/designee in-service all nurses in proper management of skin and wound issues. The resident's wounds must be reported, documented, and the MD notified. The areas F 0684 must be assessed completely and described in progress notes with origin. Treatment order in place. Residents going to the wound clinic are expected to be measured in the facility and assessed by the wound nurse with proper documentation. Education includes the importance of scheduling follow-up appointments. This is an oversight by the wound care nurse. The in-service period is ongoing, ending 4-9-2026. Wound nurse and DON were in-serviced 3-26-26 by the corporate nurse this inservicing also includes the need to schedule follow-up appointments. How the corrective action will be monitored to ensure the deficient practice will not recur. Weekly audits 5x week for 4 weeks per wound nurse /designee for residents with wounds. The audit includes observation of the wound and documentation.to ensure wounds are being accurately and continually assessed and the cause of trauma is being documented. The daily audit of all shower sheets to identify any new skin concerns to ensure there is no skin issue that goes without being identified and treated, reported to MD and the responsible party. The daily shower sheet is are audited by the wound nurse, and the wound nurse reports findings from the daily audit sheets in the morning clinical meeting. Weekly assessment of skin for all residents per wound nurse/designee. The shower sheet audit is reported in the morning clinical meeting and if any issues are identified, the wound nurse immediately calls the CNP and educates caregivers. Audits for skin are 5x week, ongoing. Results submitted to the QAPI committee. any concerns corrected and reeducation completed. Wound clinic appointments are monitored by the wound nurse and schedule is reported in morning clinical. monitored weekly by DON.
Penalty
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