Failure to Prevent Heater Burns and Address Post-Heimlich Rib Pain
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure an environment free from accident hazards and to provide adequate supervision and assessment, resulting in serious injuries to two residents. For the first resident, who was actively dying on hospice with lung cancer, poor skin integrity, lethargy, severe pain, and non-verbal pain behaviors, staff did not adequately identify and address the risk posed by a baseboard heater located directly next to the bed. Multiple staff reported that this resident frequently swung or placed her legs off the bed and onto the heater, yet there was no care plan addressing burn risk from the heater prior to the incident. On the night of the burn, documentation showed the resident was to be turned and repositioned every two hours, but the Treatment Administration Record reflected only four documented repositioning times out of 24 opportunities over two days, and surveillance video from midnight to 5:30 a.m. showed only four very brief room entries before the burn was discovered, contradicting staff statements that checks occurred every 30 minutes or every two hours. In the early morning, the resident was found in bed with her left leg hanging off the side and on top of the baseboard heater, with her foot wedged in the heater according to one staff account. Staff described the burn as a significant second-degree burn from the toes to the heel, covering the entire bottom of the left foot, with additional second-degree burns on the left calf and toes, and with substantial fluid and blood drainage. At the time she was found, the resident was not responsive to verbal or physical stimuli and could not report pain. Staff applied cool, wet cloths to the leg and foot. Witnesses reported that the bandage on the burn appeared new when hospice arrived later, despite the burn having occurred earlier that morning, and one staff member stated the leg did not get wrapped until after the resident passed away. The Skin Observation Tool documenting the second-degree burns and identifying the baseboard heater as the cause was not signed until eleven days after the event. The physical environment also contributed to the hazard. The maintenance staff member reported that wall heating units had been damaged over the years, with missing parts and sharp metal edges, and that he relied on floor staff to notify him of damage; several damaged heat registers had not been reported and had no work orders. He stated that room temperatures should be 72–82°F and heat registers 140–150°F, but temperature checks performed with a facility temperature gun in multiple rooms showed heater surface temperatures ranging from 190°F to over 200°F and described as very warm to the touch, with one resident and family member complaining that it was too hot. Maintenance also acknowledged that no heater temperature checks had been completed since the burn incident. These conditions, combined with the resident’s known behavior of placing her legs on the heater, her dependence for repositioning, and the lack of documented frequent monitoring and a specific care plan for heater-related burn risk, led to the resident sustaining extensive second-degree burns. For the second resident, the deficiency centers on the facility’s failure to adequately assess and respond to ongoing rib pain following two choking incidents in which the Heimlich maneuver was performed. This resident had severe cognitive impairment, as evidenced by Brief Interview for Mental Status (BIMS) scores of 4 and later 0, and a history of serious injuries including complex pelvic and rib fractures identified after a later fall. During the first choking incident, staff performed the Heimlich maneuver while the resident remained seated in a chair. Nursing progress notes documented that shortly afterward the resident complained of soreness and then persistent right lower rib pain, with pain levels reported up to 7/10 and later 8/10. The notes show repeated complaints of right rib pain over several days, with the resident sometimes declining hospital evaluation and PRN Tylenol, and at other times accepting Tylenol, which made the pain tolerable but did not resolve it. Despite the resident’s severe cognitive impairment, the facility relied on his stated preference not to go to the hospital and did not consistently re-engage the responsible party after the initial contact, nor did they obtain diagnostic evaluation for the rib pain. Nursing documentation shows that after the first choking event, the resident’s pain complaints continued daily, and a second choking incident occurred a few days later, again requiring the Heimlich maneuver. The provider ordered monitoring for pain after the second choking event, but there were no X-rays or other diagnostic tests ordered in response to the ongoing rib pain. Vital sign records show incomplete documentation of pain scores on several days when progress notes indicated the resident was in pain. The resident’s care plan was later found to be missing from the EHR, and there was no speech/swallow evaluation because the usual hospital-based speech therapist position was vacant. When the resident subsequently fell and was sent to the ER for hip pain, hospital records identified a complex pelvic fracture and nondisplaced fractures of the right 6th and 7th ribs, confirming rib fractures that had not been previously evaluated despite days of documented rib pain following the Heimlich maneuvers. Facility leadership stated they did not further review the rib fractures as a concern because the resident was on hospice and they focused on overall pain management, but the record shows limited use of PRN analgesics and no escalation of assessment in response to persistent pain complaints. Facility policies in place at the time required frequent monitoring of terminal residents, a structured and documented repositioning program for residents in bed at least every two hours, and reassessment of acute or significantly worsened pain every 30–60 minutes until relief was obtained. The documented practices for both residents deviated from these expectations. For the first resident, there was inadequate documentation of repositioning and monitoring, no pre-incident care plan addressing known heater-related behaviors, and environmental heater temperatures far exceeding the stated range. For the second resident, there was incomplete pain assessment documentation, reliance on the expressed wishes of a severely cognitively impaired resident without consistent involvement of the responsible party, absence of diagnostic evaluation despite persistent rib pain after forceful abdominal thrusts, and a missing care plan in the EHR. These actions and inactions led surveyors to cite the facility under F689 for accidents and hazards, with an Immediate Jeopardy determination related to the first resident’s heater burns.
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