Failure to Honor Residents’ Choice of Attending Physician After Termination of Physician Privileges
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to honor residents’ rights to choose their own attending physician after corporate leadership discontinued privileges for Physician A, who was caring for 35 residents. The facility’s Resident Rights policy states that residents have the right to choose a personal attending physician, be fully informed in advance about care and treatment and any changes that may affect their well-being, and participate in planning care and treatment. In early March, the DON and Administrator received an email from the corporate CNO stating that, effective at the end of the month, Physician A would no longer have privileges with the organization and instructing them to notify residents of the change and determine whether they wanted to stay with Physician A. Despite this, all of Physician A’s residents were changed to Physician B by the facility due to a corporate deadline, and no letter was issued to residents regarding the change. Multiple residents and their representatives expressed a clear preference to remain under the care of Physician A, but the facility did not coordinate continued access to that care. One cognitively intact resident with anxiety and depression was informed by Social Services that Physician A would no longer maintain privileges and that continued care would require outside appointments, with the facility assisting with transportation. The resident stated a desire to stay with Physician A, citing satisfaction and desire for continuity, yet the medical record listed Physician B as the PCP, and the resident later reported being told by the Activity Director that he had to change physicians because Physician A could no longer practice at the facility and the office was too far away. Another resident with moderate cognitive impairment, high blood pressure, anxiety disorder, and schizophrenia similarly expressed a preference to remain with Physician A, and Social Services documented that transportation assistance would be provided; however, the medical record also showed Physician B as the PCP, and the resident’s family member reported not being notified of the PCP change and wanting the resident to keep Physician A. Additional residents and guardians experienced the same pattern. A resident with no cognitive impairment, high blood pressure, and schizophrenia had a guardian who was notified that Physician A would lose privileges and who clearly stated a preference to keep Physician A, yet the resident’s record listed Physician B as PCP, and the guardian believed Physician A was still the PCP. Two other residents with severe cognitive impairment and diagnoses including stroke, cerebral palsy, high blood pressure, diabetes, and dementia were informed, along with their family, that Physician A would no longer have privileges and that continued care would require outside appointments with transportation assistance from the facility. Both residents expressed a preference to remain with Physician A, but their records listed Physician B as PCP. Their guardian reported being told that Physician A would no longer be allowed in the facility and, lacking a car to transport the residents, felt there was no real choice and agreed to the change. The DON later acknowledged that transportation had not been set up for residents who wanted to stay with Physician A and that, to her knowledge, Physician A did not have an office, while Physician A’s office manager stated that Physician A had not had an examination office for about 15 years and preferred to see residents onsite in the facility. These actions and omissions resulted in residents’ stated choices to remain with Physician A not being honored or facilitated.
Penalty
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