Failure to Assess and Intervene for Respiratory Distress and Hemoptysis
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide timely and thorough assessment and intervention for residents experiencing significant respiratory changes and possible bleeding while on anticoagulant therapy. For Resident #16, who had chronic respiratory failure with hypoxia, COPD, obstructive sleep apnea, atrial fibrillation, and sleep‑related hypoventilation, the care plan directed staff to monitor for signs and symptoms of respiratory distress and to report changes to the provider as needed. Physician orders included PRN albuterol nebulizer, PRN albuterol‑budesonide inhaler, and oxygen at 2 L/min via nasal cannula to maintain oxygen saturation above 92%, with documentation of oxygen saturation, pulse, respirations, and lung sounds pre‑ and post‑administration when PRN treatments were used. The April MAR/TAR showed no documentation that PRN respiratory medications were administered, and the electronic record for 4/15/26 contained only a weekly skin assessment and an infection assessment, with no documented respiratory assessment despite multiple indications of respiratory compromise. On 4/15/26, Resident #16’s oxygen saturation readings included 96% on room air at 4:29 AM and 90% on BiPAP at 8:11 AM, with later readings of 93% on BiPAP. Staff G, the RN caring for the resident that morning, reported that when therapy sat the resident on the side of the bed, she could not get enough air and her oxygen saturation was 68%, prompting staff to put her back on BiPAP, after which the saturation reportedly increased to 94%. Staff G stated she completed an assessment, repeatedly checked oxygen saturation, and listened to lung sounds, but she did not document these assessments or the subsequent oxygen readings. She also stated she increased oxygen to 2.5 L when the saturation was 90%, but did not document the change or obtain a corresponding physician order, despite saying she notified the physician. The clinic nurse later stated she was not told about an oxygen saturation of 68% and that, had she known, the physician would likely have ordered ED evaluation. The DON acknowledged that Staff G noted a low oxygen level of 68% and applied BiPAP but did not document interventions or use of PRN albuterol as expected. Throughout the day, Resident #16 and her husband reported that she felt ill for several days, complained of fluid overload, shortness of breath, and difficulty breathing, and that she was gasping for air during therapy. The husband and resident both stated that staff did not appear concerned, did not perform assessments when she reported feeling ill, did not offer PRN breathing treatments, and did not increase oxygen. Staff D, a CNA, confirmed that during an attempted transfer with therapy, the resident said she could not breathe, took long deep breaths between words, seemed weak and tired, and insisted on lying back down; he recalled that her oxygen was low but did not remember the exact number. Despite these reports, there was no documented comprehensive respiratory assessment on 4/15/26. Later that evening, the resident called 911 herself, reporting someone nearby was having a stroke. EMS found her pale, cool, confused, and hallucinating, with oxygen saturation in the high 60s to low 70s and respirations of 36. EMS documented rales bilaterally, initiated CPAP with escalating PEEP due to persistent respiratory distress, and transported her to the ED, where she was diagnosed with possible pneumonia and CHF exacerbation. The primary care physician stated he was not informed of oxygen saturations in the 60s or 70s and that such values would have warranted notification and ED evaluation. For Resident #41, the report identifies another failure to follow care plan directives related to respiratory status and anticoagulant use. This resident had intact cognition, diagnoses including hypertension, pneumonia, COPD, and atrial fibrillation, and was receiving apixaban 5 mg twice daily. The care plan for altered respiratory status directed staff to monitor for and report signs and symptoms of respiratory distress, including hemoptysis, and the anticoagulant care plan directed staff to report blood‑tinged or frank blood in urine, black tarry stools, dark or bright red blood in stools, sudden severe headaches, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, muscle/joint pain, lethargy, bruising, blurred vision, shortness of breath, loss of appetite, sudden changes in mental status, and significant or sudden changes in vital signs. The report notes that this resident was reviewed in the context of coughing/spitting up blood while on an anticoagulant, indicating that staff did not complete appropriate assessment or intervention in response to hemoptysis as required by the care plan and physician orders. Specific details of the communication to the physician are referenced in a fax communication dated 3/30/26, but the excerpt provided ends before the content of that fax is fully described, leaving the documented deficiency focused on the failure to adequately assess and respond to the resident’s reported coughing/spitting up blood. Collectively, the findings show that for two of three residents reviewed, staff did not complete timely, comprehensive assessments or implement ordered or care‑planned interventions when residents exhibited low oxygen saturation or hemoptysis. For Resident #16, this included lack of documented respiratory assessments, failure to use or document PRN respiratory medications, failure to document oxygen adjustments and subsequent vital signs, and failure to communicate critical oxygen saturation values to the physician or clinic nurse. For Resident #41, this included failure to follow care plan directives to assess and report hemoptysis in the context of COPD and anticoagulant therapy. These actions and omissions occurred despite clear care plan instructions and physician orders directing staff to monitor for and respond to respiratory changes and bleeding‑related signs and symptoms.
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