Failure to Coordinate Wound Care, IV Antibiotics, and Timely Surgery for Diabetic Foot Wound
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to coordinate and provide ordered wound care, IV antibiotics, and timely surgical scheduling for a resident with a complex left foot diabetic wound and MRSA bacteremia. The resident had multiple diagnoses including infective myositis of the left foot, abscess of the tendon sheath, osteomyelitis, MRSA infection, non‑pressure chronic foot ulcer with muscle involvement, neuropathy, COPD, type 2 DM with foot ulcer, prior right great toe amputation, weight loss, hypertension, and anemia. The resident was cognitively intact per MDS and required supervision or touching assistance for most ADLs. Care plan entries noted chronic wounds/infection, risk for skin impairments related to diabetes and impaired mobility, and that the resident had a history of removing dressings and unplugging the wound vac without notifying staff. Wound notes documented progressive worsening of the left plantar foot wound from 2/10/2026 through 4/7/2026, with increasing size, presence of exudate, and visible bone. The facility did not consistently follow physician orders for wound care and IV antibiotic therapy after the resident’s hospitalization for left foot MRSA infection. Hospital discharge instructions included Daptomycin 500 mg IV every 24 hours until 4/17/2026 with weekly labs, and wound care orders from the podiatrist specified saline wet‑to‑dry dressing changes twice daily. The March MAR showed that an order to cleanse the left foot, leave the Restrada graft in place, and apply wet‑to‑dry dressings and ABD wrap when the wound vac was not available was not documented as completed from 3/13/2026 to 3/31/2026. The April MAR showed missed doses of Daptomycin on 4/8/2026, 4/9/2026, and 4/12/2026, and administration times that did not follow the every‑24‑hour order on five days. The April MAR also showed missed Hibiclens pre‑surgical dose, missed PICC/midline assessments on specified dates, and missed faxing of lab results on multiple days. The DON and ADON acknowledged that if care or medications were not documented on the MAR, they were not done, and the Medical Director stated he expected all physician orders to be followed and no doses to be missed. The facility also failed to effectively coordinate and prioritize scheduling of the resident’s needed foot surgery despite repeated contacts from the podiatrist and his clinic. The podiatrist documented on 3/31/2026 that the left foot wound was worsening, with exposed bone and need for repeat debridement and left first ray amputation, and stated he faxed orders to the facility and called multiple times without return calls. He reported calling the facility over six times, leaving messages that the resident needed surgery STAT due to exposed bone and osteomyelitis, and that no one called him back until the ADON eventually responded in April. The podiatry clinic RN reported attempts to contact the facility on multiple consecutive days to schedule surgery after insurance approval, with successful contact only after about a week. The CNA/receptionist and an LPN corroborated that the podiatrist had called repeatedly, was upset that the DON was not returning calls, and threatened to contact Public Health. Facility leadership, including the Administrator, DON, and ADON, stated they were initially unaware of issues or delays with scheduling the surgery, and staff reported that the facility had been without a wound nurse for about a month, during which time wound responsibilities were informally covered by an LPN while also working the floor. Ultimately, the resident underwent surgery and had more of the left foot amputated due to infection, with the podiatrist stating he believed more of the foot had to be removed because surgery was not scheduled earlier and that the facility had not coordinated care or returned calls in a timely manner. On physical observation shortly before surgery, the resident’s left foot showed a large plantar wound with visible bone and a red streak across the foot, with the area larger than a fifty‑cent piece. Staff interviews indicated that the wound had been present and problematic for at least a year, and that bone visibility was not noted that far back. Wound notes from late March and early April documented that the wound was advancing, increasing in size, with serosanguinous exudate and visible bone. The facility had no wound care policy, and the Administrator stated they expected physician orders to be followed. The Physician‑Family Notification policy required timely communication with the physician and family when there was a need to alter treatment significantly, and the Medication Administration policy required medications to be administered in accordance with physician orders and documented on the MAR. Despite these policies, the record review, interviews, and observations showed that the facility did not ensure consistent implementation of ordered wound care, IV antibiotic therapy, lab monitoring, PICC assessments, and timely coordination of surgical intervention for this resident’s worsening foot wound. The DON reported limited RN staffing for a census of 118 residents and stated that while they were doing the best they could, it was not enough at times. Staff also reported that the facility had been without a designated wound nurse for about a month, and that wound care duties were being informally covered by an LPN who was also assigned to floor duties. The podiatrist and his clinic staff described multiple unsuccessful attempts to reach facility leadership to arrange surgery, and internal staff accounts confirmed that calls were routed to the DON without response for a period of time. The combination of missed and improperly timed antibiotic doses, incomplete wound treatments, inconsistent lab faxing and PICC assessments, lack of a wound care policy, absence of a wound nurse for a period, and failure to respond promptly to the podiatrist’s repeated efforts to schedule surgery all contributed to a delay in surgical intervention for the resident’s left foot wound, culminating in a more extensive amputation due to the spread of infection.
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