Failure to Follow Wound Care Orders and Obtain Ordered Medihoney for Amputation and Pressure Ulcer
Summary
Facility staff failed to provide wound care per physician orders and standards of practice for one resident with a right below-knee amputation (BKA) and a left ankle pressure ulcer. The resident was admitted with a history of type 2 diabetes mellitus, cellulitis of the right lower limb, a left ankle pressure ulcer, a right foot amputation, and a non-pressure chronic ulcer of the right ankle. On admission, staff did not document wound measurements for the surgical site because they reported they could not remove the outer dressing until the next orthopedic appointment, and the right BKA site was not evaluated on the following day. The care plan directed staff to administer treatments as ordered, monitor dressings, consult wound care as appropriate, and provide wound care per treatment orders, but the facility did not have a wound care treatment and management policy and did not provide a policy regarding physician’s orders. On a follow-up visit, an outside practitioner diagnosed a suspected surgical site infection at the BKA stump and ordered daily local wound care with TheraHoney along the incision line, with daily dressing changes and cleansing. The corresponding physician order and TAR entry specified daily wound care using TheraHoney. However, documentation showed multiple days where wound care was placed “on hold,” not completed, or recorded as refused without detailed progress notes. Staff documented that TheraHoney was not available and substituted triple antibiotic ointment on at least two dates, while on many other dates they documented that wound care was provided without noting that the ordered TheraHoney was unavailable. The facility’s supply order for TheraHoney was placed mid-month and showed the product as backordered with an estimated ship date more than a month later, yet there was no documentation that the physician or pharmacy was notified about the unavailability of TheraHoney during this period. Interviews revealed that nursing staff knew the ordered Medihoney/TheraHoney was not available but did not consistently notify the physician or DON, and did not consistently document calls to the pharmacy or supply company. One RN stated the pharmacy never sent the Medihoney, acknowledged failing to document calls to the pharmacy, and admitted bringing Medihoney from home, transferring it into a cup, and using it twice on the resident’s wound without documentation and without other staff access. Staff also reported using triple antibiotic ointment in place of Medihoney without evidence of a corresponding physician order change, and the DON stated he did not know what was being used in place of Medihoney and that no staff had informed him it was unavailable. The resident reported that staff had used triple antibiotic ointment instead of the ordered Medihoney, that wound dressings had been changed only a few times over a multi-week period, and that the surgeon was upset that Medihoney had not been available for dressing changes. A later follow-up visit documented necrotic tissue on the BKA stump and resulted in new orders for wet-to-dry dressings and dry dressings with optional Medihoney if available, but facility records still lacked documentation of timely notification to the physician about the earlier lack of Medihoney and the substitutions that had been made. The facility’s own skin policy addressed weekly skin checks, documentation of wound appearance and measurements, and staging of pressure injuries, but there was no wound care treatment and management policy provided, and no policy regarding physician’s orders. Interviews with the DON, administrator, LPN, and medical director consistently indicated that staff were expected to follow wound care orders as written, notify the physician and leadership when supplies were unavailable, avoid bringing medications from home, and accurately document when treatments were not completed or when substitutions were made. Despite these stated expectations, the record showed repeated undocumented deviations from the physician’s wound care orders, undocumented missed or delayed dressing changes, use of non-ordered products, and lack of timely communication with the physician about the unavailability of ordered wound care supplies for this resident’s BKA stump and left ankle wound.
Penalty
Resources
Below are regulatory guidelines relevant to this citation:
Trusted data from CMS and state health departments
Every citation, penalty and Plan of Correction is sourced from public CMS records (latest release June 24, 2026) and official state health department websites — never guesswork.
Trusted by long-term care providers and associations.



