Improper Catheter Management and Incomplete Incontinence Care Leading to UTI and Sepsis
Summary
The deficiency involves failures in timely urine specimen collection, proper catheter insertion, and adherence to infection control and perineal care practices for multiple residents. One resident with metabolic encephalopathy, dementia, and a history of prostate cancer post‑prostatectomy had an MDS indicating dependence on staff for toileting hygiene and documentation that he was always continent of urine, yet his care plan listed bladder incontinence and interventions to report signs of UTI. Progress notes documented agitation and aggression and an order for urine culture and sensitivity, but facility staff did not obtain a urine sample for four days. During this period, the resident experienced decreased level of consciousness and urine output, nausea, and vomiting, and was ultimately transferred to a hospital where ED labs showed cloudy urine with mucus, bacteria, and elevated red blood cells, and imaging identified a decompressed bladder with a Foley catheter in place. On the day of transfer, the Administrator inserted a Foley catheter to obtain a urine specimen despite the physician’s standing order for straight catheterization for specimen collection. The Foley catheter was left to drainage because a specimen could not be obtained. The resident was sent to the hospital with the Foley catheter in place due to a change in condition, including not opening eyes, not eating or drinking, and blood‑tinged urine. Hospital records documented that the Foley catheter was mispositioned, with the balloon partially inflated in the urethra, causing obstruction, hematuria, and infection. The resident required ICU care for septic shock secondary to Foley‑associated UTI and urosepsis in the setting of the mispositioned Foley catheter, with associated mild hydronephrosis and traumatic hematuria, and ultimately died; the death certificate listed sepsis and UTI as the cause of death, and the physician agreed that urosepsis could cause death. Additional deficiencies were identified in catheter care and incontinence care for several other residents. One resident with an indwelling Foley catheter and obstructive/reflux uropathy received catheter care from a CNA who entered the room under enhanced barrier precautions without performing hand hygiene or donning a gown, and who cleansed the groin, penis, and catheter tubing with soapy water but did not rinse or dry the resident. Another resident with a suprapubic catheter, chronic kidney disease, acute kidney failure, cystitis, and other comorbidities had orders for enhanced barrier precautions, routine suprapubic catheter site care, securement device changes, and barrier cream application. A CNA providing peri‑care and catheter care to this resident failed to don PPE despite an EBP sign, used the same soiled gloves throughout cleansing of the suprapubic site, groins, penis, and scrotum, did not apply the ordered cream, and did not secure the catheter, leaving it hanging freely. Further, residents with urinary incontinence and skin integrity issues did not receive complete incontinence care as ordered and per facility policy. One resident with moderate cognitive impairment, frequent bowel and bladder incontinence, and orders for enhanced barrier precautions and barrier cream was assisted to the toilet and wiped twice from front to back while standing, but the peri‑area and vagina were not cleansed, the soiled brief was pulled back up, no new brief was applied, no barrier cream was used on visibly reddened and slightly excoriated buttocks and anal area, and there was no hand hygiene or glove change between soiled and clean areas. Another resident with severe cognitive impairment, frequent incontinence, and a care plan for skin integrity and moisture management had a slightly wet brief removed during wound care, but no incontinence cleansing or new brief was provided, with the nurse stating she preferred to let the resident “air out.” In a separate observation, a resident dependent on staff for toileting hygiene and frequently incontinent of bowel and bladder had a saturated brief with urine and stool removed while standing; the CNA initially wiped visible stool with a wet towel, then left and returned with gloves and wipes, but only swiped from the back while the resident stood, without cleansing the inner thighs or buttocks or drying the area. These observed practices conflicted with the facility’s written policies on intermittent catheterization, urinary catheter care, perineal care, and suprapubic catheter care, which require verification of physician orders, proper specimen collection technique, documentation of urine characteristics and resident condition, and thorough cleansing, rinsing, and drying of the perineal and catheter areas using appropriate infection control measures. The policies also specify front‑to‑back cleansing for female residents, separate washcloths and water for labia and rectal areas, and proper care of suprapubic catheter sites to prevent skin irritation and urinary tract infection. The survey findings showed that these procedures were not consistently followed by staff during the provision of catheter care and incontinence care to the affected residents.
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