Neglect in Enteral Nutrition, Diabetes Management, and Infection Monitoring
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to protect a resident from neglect related to enteral nutrition, diabetes management, and monitoring for infection and respiratory status. The resident was admitted with diagnoses including cerebral infarction, pneumonia, dysphagia, and type 2 diabetes, and was NPO with orders for PEG tube feeding using Glucerna 1.5 at a specified rate, along with insulin lispro on a sliding scale. Upon admission, the facility changed the ordered Glucerna to Jevity 1.5 without documented rationale and did not initiate tube feeding until many hours after admission, with documentation showing Jevity first administered approximately 23 hours after admission and water flushes about 6 hours after admission. The resident’s insulin from the hospital discharge orders was not entered and administered on admission; instead, the facility delayed ordering and starting diabetic medications, with oral Jardiance initiated about 13 days after admission and Lantus insulin about 14 days after admission. The facility did not consistently follow its own parameters and standing orders for hyperglycemia management and failed to timely intervene or notify practitioners despite numerous critically elevated blood glucose readings. Facility policy required notifying the practitioner when blood sugar exceeded 400, yet the resident’s blood sugars were above 300 on at least 29 occasions and repeatedly above 400, including readings of 435, 455, 509, and 510, without documented timely intervention or consistent communication to the practitioner. Progress notes show that on one day a blood sugar of 510 led to an order for 20 units of regular insulin and that the resident’s wife reported noticing a change in condition days earlier and requested transfer to the emergency room. However, there was no documentation of ongoing nursing assessments addressing the persistently elevated blood sugars, no A1C results despite being ordered, and the DON acknowledged that the facility could not identify who was closely monitoring these levels or provide other interventions implemented during the period of sustained hyperglycemia. The facility also failed to assess and document the resident’s pneumonia, respiratory status, and PEG tube site, and did not maintain adequate documentation of changes in condition leading up to the resident’s transfer to the hospital. The resident was admitted on an antibiotic for pneumonia, but the record lacked respiratory assessments, monitoring of pneumonia progression or improvement, documentation of antibiotic use related to pneumonia, or a short-term care plan for this diagnosis. Therapy staff and CNAs reported that over time the resident became increasingly lethargic, weak, and more dependent for transfers, with observations of posterior lean, difficulty with transfers, dizziness, and appearing as “dead weight,” and a speech therapist documented concern for a change in status that was communicated to nursing and the NP. Despite these reports, there were no corresponding nursing assessments or transfer forms in the record. EMS documentation indicated that staff reported the resident had been in an altered mental status with blood glucose levels sustained above 500 for several days prior to transfer, and hospital records described admission for altered mental status, hypernatremia, hyperglycemia, acute kidney injury, and sepsis. The DON and Administrator were unable to locate documentation of PEG site assessments or explain the lack of pneumonia-related assessments and monitoring, confirming gaps in required nursing assessment and documentation. The combination of delayed initiation and inappropriate change of enteral nutrition, failure to follow discharge insulin orders or timely implement diabetes treatment, lack of timely intervention and communication regarding persistently elevated blood glucose levels, and absence of documented respiratory and PEG site assessments for an admitted pneumonia diagnosis constituted neglect of the resident’s care needs. These inactions and omissions led to an unnoticed and undocumented change in condition that ultimately required hospitalization, as evidenced by EMS and hospital records describing the resident’s deteriorated state at the time of transfer.
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