Failure to Monitor Weight, Document Change of Condition, and Update Care Plan for Resident With Significant Weight Loss
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to monitor a resident’s weight per orders and facility guidelines, failure to complete and document a change-of-condition assessment when significant weight loss occurred, and failure to update the resident-centered care plan to reflect current needs. The resident had multiple diagnoses including protein-calorie malnutrition, diabetes, GERD, bipolar disorder, dementia, and hypertension, and was cognitively impaired with a BIMS score of 10/15, requiring assistance with care. Weight records showed gaps and significant losses: no weights documented for November 2025 and January 2026, a 5.82% loss between late October and late December 2025, and a 9.23% loss between early February and late March 2026. Despite facility guidelines requiring monthly weights and weekly weights with significant change or decline in intake, there were no current weight orders beyond an older weekly-weight order from 10/7/2024, and the DON could not account for the missing monthly weights. The facility also did not complete or document a change-of-condition assessment (SBAR or equivalent nursing assessment) in response to the resident’s significant weight loss. Provider notes in March 2026 documented worsening debility, decreased oral intake (approximately 25–50% of meals and sometimes 0%), and a documented weight drop from 143 lbs to 129.8 lbs. The PA ordered the resident to be weighed and referenced weight concerns on multiple dates, but there were no SBAR forms or nursing notes documenting a change-of-condition assessment related to the weight loss. The DON confirmed that such weight changes would be considered a significant change, that a change-of-condition assessment should have been completed, and that SBAR is the facility’s method for documenting such changes, yet none were found in the medical record. Although medical providers and dietary staff later documented weight loss and interventions, the nursing documentation of assessment and change-of-condition response was absent. In addition, the resident’s care plans were not updated to reflect current nutritional risk, weight loss, and ADL/feeding status. The bedside and nursing care plans continued to state that the resident needed only limited assistance with self-feeding using adaptive equipment, even though direct observations and staff interviews showed the resident was a total assist for eating and drinking and could not coordinate holding a cup. CNA and nurse interviews confirmed that the resident required feeding assistance and had been a total feed since therapy ended, but this was not reflected in the care plan. The dietary care plan, originally created in October 2024 and revised in January 2026, identified the resident as at risk for malnutrition and outlined monitoring for significant weight changes, but there were no further revisions to incorporate the documented significant weight loss, diet texture changes, or appetite-related medication orders. Dietary progress notes also showed gaps, with no notes between late October 2025 and late February 2026, and then none again until April 2026, despite the resident’s documented weight loss and risk for malnutrition. These combined failures resulted in delayed care contributing to a 9.23% weight loss over seven weeks. The deficiency was further illustrated by inconsistencies between practice and documentation. Observations on the survey date showed the resident in bed after breakfast with staff unable to state how much she had eaten, and later being totally fed 100% of a pureed lunch by a CNA. Staff interviews indicated that the resident had been eating better since a recent change to a pureed diet and that she could not feed herself, yet the care plan still described only limited assistance. The RD reported that she was on maternity leave during part of the period when weights and dietary notes were missing and was unaware of the December weight loss, stating that another RD should have addressed it. The DON acknowledged that the care plan did not reflect the resident’s current ADL and dietary needs, that there were no documented weekly weight orders despite RD and provider requests, and that there was no additional documentation to support appropriate monitoring and response to the resident’s significant weight loss. Overall, the facility’s inactions and documentation gaps—missing monthly and weekly weights, lack of change-of-condition assessment and nursing notes, and failure to revise the care plan to reflect total feeding assistance and significant weight loss—resulted in delayed care for a resident with known malnutrition risk and contributed to a 9.23% weight loss in seven weeks.
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