Failure to Notify Representatives and Physicians of Significant Changes in Condition
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to promptly notify residents’ representatives and physicians of significant changes in condition for two residents. For the first resident, an elderly woman with severe cognitive impairment and multiple serious diagnoses including metabolic encephalopathy, dysphagia, diabetes, sepsis, congestive heart failure, acute kidney failure, adult failure to thrive, COVID-19, pneumonia, and acute respiratory failure, the record showed she required a surrogate for decision-making. On the identified date, she was found unresponsive and in cardiac arrest. Staff initiated CPR, called 911, obtained a physician’s order to transfer her to the emergency room, and completed a transfer and discharge form. However, the form listed the resident herself as the responsible party notified, using her own phone number, and there was no documentation that any emergency contacts or her healthcare proxy were notified of this critical change in condition and transfer. Interviews further clarified the lack of appropriate notification for this resident. An RN who assisted with CPR stated that during the code, the Nurse Supervisor was at the desk calling 911, the physician, and the family, and later the former DON informed the nurses that the resident’s daughter was upset because she had not been notified of her mother’s transfer. The daughter, identified in the record as the healthcare proxy and listed as emergency contact #1, reported she was not contacted by the facility and only learned of her mother’s cardiac arrest and transfer when the hospital called her later that evening. She stated she told the former DON she was upset about not being notified and was told that staff had mixed up the phone numbers, but she never received an explanation or follow-up. The former DON confirmed that the assigned nurse reported confusing the phone numbers and acknowledged that no investigation was conducted after the incident, and that the family was only made aware of the transfer when the granddaughter called the facility after the resident had already been transferred. The second resident was admitted for respite care with diagnoses including stroke with right-sided deficit, a right heel pressure ulcer, coronary artery disease, and a pacemaker, and was documented as cognitively intact. Initial assessments and daily nursing documentation indicated no skin issues, while CNA task lists later documented a skin tear to the arm and then a skin tear to the leg on subsequent days. The physician’s history and physical noted right heel pain but did not mention arm or leg skin tears, and the discharge summary stated there were no skin issues at discharge. The resident’s daughter reported that when she arrived to pick him up, she observed a bandage on his leg and was told by the resident that wheelchairs had fallen during an outing, causing scratches to his arm and a gash to his leg. She stated that no one from the facility had called to inform her of the incident or the resulting skin impairments, despite her multiple calls to the Administrator and a conversation with the Social Worker. The DON later stated there should have been a documented change in condition for the skin tears and confirmed that the nurse, physician, and daughter should have been notified. The facility’s policy on Change in a Resident’s Condition or Status required prompt notification of the resident, attending physician, and representative of changes in medical or mental condition or status, including incidents, accidents, injuries, and transfers, which was not followed in these cases.
Penalty
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