Inaccurate MDS Coding for PASRR Status and Insulin Use
Summary
The facility failed to accurately complete MDS assessments for 3 of 20 residents reviewed. For one resident, the MDS indicated no serious mental illness and/or intellectual disability or related condition even though the assessment included diagnoses of anxiety, depression, and bipolar disorder, and a PASRR Level I screen dated 11/17/25 showed a positive screening with no status change and directed the facility to mark yes for MDS question A1500. For two other residents, the MDSs lacked a diagnosis of diabetes mellitus but each assessment reflected insulin use 1 of 7 days during the lookback period, while the physician orders showed weekly Zepbound injections for weight management. One resident denied being diabetic and stated he took a weekly shot for weight loss, and the other resident denied being diabetic and thought she took a weekly injection for weight loss. The MDS Coordinator stated she gathered information by observing on the floor and talking to residents, used the last PASRR evaluation to answer A1500, and used the EMAR to code insulin injections in the last 7 days. She stated she had several residents getting Wegovy and marked them as 1 day of insulin because she counted them as insulin, and said she would submit an MDS correction if that was incorrect. The DON stated she did not know if Zepbound should be coded as insulin on the MDS and confirmed both residents took it for weight loss. The FDA information in the report identified Zepbound as a GIP and GLP-1 receptor agonist used for chronic weight management, and the LTC Facility Resident Assessment Instrument 3.0 User's Manual defined insulin as a medication used to treat diabetes mellitus and directed staff to code high-risk drug class medications according to pharmacological classification, not how they are being used.
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