Failure to Provide Ordered PT Frequency and Document Services for a Resident
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide ordered PT services to maintain and improve range of motion and mobility for one resident. During observation and interview, the resident was alert, oriented, and reported being unable to walk, with a history of weight gain and leg weakness. The resident stated he wanted to lose weight and regain leg strength to walk again and reported he was supposed to receive PT five times per week but had only been going twice per week. He stated he was making progress with PT but was not getting as much therapy as he should and would like to attend PT every day if possible. Record review showed the resident had chronic respiratory failure with hypoxia, abnormal gait and mobility, morbid obesity, metabolic encephalopathy, osteoarthritis in both knees, and muscle weakness. The MDS dated 4/14/26 documented a BIMS score of 14, indicating minimal to no cognitive impairment, and showed the resident was dependent for transfers and required assistance with dressing and personal hygiene. The PT recertification and updated therapy plan dated 4/22/26–5/21/26 documented short- and long-term goals for ambulation with parallel bars and a FWW, justified continued skilled PT to facilitate independence with functional mobility, and specified a treatment frequency of five times per week, with the resident demonstrating good rehab potential. Review of the Service Log Matrix for April showed the resident did not receive PT on 4/13/26, 4/14/26, and 4/15/26. The PTA initially stated the resident received PT on 4/13/26 but it was not billed, so it did not appear on the log, and confirmed the resident was scheduled but did not receive PT on 4/14/26 and was not scheduled and did not receive PT on 4/15/26, despite the plan calling for five sessions per week. Review of the Daily Activity Schedules and Daily Treatment Logs for those dates showed inconsistencies: the DAS showed the resident scheduled on 4/13/26 and 4/14/26 but the resident was not on the DTL for those days, and the resident was not on either the DAS or DTL for 4/15/26. The PT stated PT was provided on 4/13/26 but could not recall why it was not billed, acknowledged the resident was not scheduled and did not receive PT on 4/14/26 and 4/15/26, and could not recall why the resident was not on the DAS for those days. The PT stated that if a regular resident was not on the DAS, rehab staff should follow up, that PT services must be documented and billed timely, and that missing three days of PT was not acceptable and could potentially set back rehabilitative progress if missed treatments continued. The DOR stated that treatment notes should be billed within 24 hours as standard practice and that it was the responsibility of the DOR, rehab aide, and PT to ensure residents met their ordered PT frequency. The DOR noted the PT had access to the assignment board, that the board was mapped out weeks in advance, and that lack of documentation indicated services were not provided. The DOR also stated that missed treatments could slow rehabilitative progress. The DON and Administrator both stated that PT services should meet the ordered frequency, that missed treatments could cause a decline in rehabilitative progress, and that documentation and billing should be completed in a timely manner to reflect care provided. The facility’s policy on Specialized Rehabilitative Services stated that the facility will provide rehabilitative services as indicated by the MDS and that PT is among the specialized services to be provided by qualified personnel, with treatment discontinued or transitioned to a maintenance program only after goals are met. Despite this, the resident, who was a regular PT patient with an active plan for five sessions per week, missed three consecutive days of PT services without valid documented reasons and with inconsistent scheduling and documentation, leading to the cited deficiency.
Penalty
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