Failure to Provide Adequate End-of-Life Pain Management for Two Residents
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide adequate and timely pain management for two residents at the end of life. For the first resident, multiple staff interviews described that the resident was always in a lot of pain during checks and changes and that she was not very verbal, requiring staff to rely on non-verbal indicators such as grimacing to assess pain. One nurse reported that the resident would mumble what she thought was "no" when asked about pain, but her facial expressions indicated she was in significant pain. The same nurse stated that the resident’s medication orders were a "debacle," with orders not matching and the facility not receiving medications as ordered. During physician walking rounds, the physician directed that this resident receive PRN pain medication immediately due to signs of significant pain. A staff member reported that she notified another nurse, who then instructed the floor nurse to administer the PRN pain medication immediately. However, the floor nurse did not administer the medication for more than four hours after being told to do so. The floor nurse later stated she was fearful of giving the pain medication because she had been reprimanded the prior day for giving too much PRN pain medication to another resident, leading her to second-guess herself about administering pain medications. Pain assessment documentation showed a pain score of 6/10 at 12:30 a.m. with medication reportedly given at 1:07 a.m., but facility surveillance video from midnight to 5:30 a.m. showed only brief, infrequent entries into the resident’s room and did not show staff entering every two hours or 30–60 minutes after medication administration as required by facility policy. For the second resident, who had a complex pelvic fracture and rib fractures and was returned to the facility on comfort care with hospice involvement, progress notes documented repeated episodes of severe pain, agitation, and restlessness that were not effectively controlled. The resident cried out in pain with movement after the initial fall and later had multiple episodes where scheduled pain medication, PRN morphine, repositioning, and a lidocaine patch were ineffective, requiring additional PRN opioids before some relief was achieved. Subsequent notes described the resident as agitated, yelling, trying to throw himself on the floor, pulling at his catheter, and experiencing delusions, with PRN pain medications and non-pharmacological interventions often noted as ineffective. Staff contacted hospice several times, but at points no new PRN orders were received, and there were periods when only limited medications (such as Phenergan suppositories) were available. Further documentation showed that the resident continued to experience high pain scores (up to 10/10) and ongoing agitation and restlessness despite administration of ordered PRN medications. One nurse reported that Ativan had expired and that the physician initially wanted her to use the expired medication; she refused and had to wait for new medication to arrive. Another nurse stated that the resident was always in so much pain, that she gave medications as ordered and tried non-pharmacological interventions, but she did not attempt to call the physician, DON, or hospice for additional pain management because she believed the day shift had already made a plan and did not think she should call in the middle of the night. She also stated she did not know she could contact hospice on night shift and had received no training on hospice or end-of-life care. The DON confirmed that this nurse had not had training on end-of-life care or hospice and acknowledged a training opportunity. Pain vital records showed persistent moderate to severe pain throughout the day, and the facility was unable to provide requested surveillance video for part of the relevant period. The facility’s own pain policy required reassessment of acute or significantly worsened pain every 30–60 minutes until relief and immediate contact with the prescriber if pain was not adequately controlled, which was not consistently followed for this resident.
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