Failure to Provide Discharge Education and Orders for Cardiac Vest Monitor
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide necessary discharge education and related documentation for a resident using a cardiac vest monitor. The resident was admitted with multiple diagnoses, including new onset cardiomyopathy requiring a LifeVest wearable cardioverter-defibrillator, and was cognitively intact and able to follow instructions. During the resident’s readmission, the RN who routinely cared for him acknowledged she forgot to enter cardiac monitoring orders, even though such orders were needed to ensure the monitor was checked every shift and its battery changed daily. The EMR and order summary for the readmission did not contain orders for cardiac vest care, and the comprehensive care plan, while addressing discharge planning, did not include a focus problem for the new cardiac condition or management of the cardiac vest. The ADON later confirmed that the EMR did not identify which cardiologist was managing the device and that there were no nursing management orders for the device, despite the resident being admitted to the facility’s Cardiopulmonary Program. At discharge, the RN who discharged the resident stated that the resident left with the cardiac vest in place, along with the charger and extra battery, but there were no active orders for device management, and she assumed the overnight nurse had changed the battery and that the resident knew how to care for the monitor. She did not provide specific instructions on cardiac monitoring, device care, cardiac complications, cardiology follow-up, or who to contact for device issues, and the Transition Home discharge form only noted that the resident was discharged with a cardiac vest monitor without documenting any specific discharge nursing instructions. The facility’s own Specialized Cardiopulmonary Program description stated that it would provide education and resources to help patients manage their disease and determine equipment needs and education at discharge, and its Wearable Cardioverter-Defibrillator and Discharges policies required documentation, specific care instructions, and teaching on special tasks at discharge. The resident was later seen in the ER with bilateral lower extremity edema and reported that the LifeVest was not working due to battery complications, and the ER documentation indicated he was educated there on contacting the device company and monitoring for cardiac complications.
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