Failure to Review and Revise Comprehensive Care Plans for Respiratory Care and Falls
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure that comprehensive care plans were reviewed and revised by the interdisciplinary team after each assessment and in response to changes in residents’ needs, as required by facility policy and regulation. The facility’s policy on comprehensive care plans, last reviewed in January 2026, states that individualized care plans with measurable objectives and timetables must be evaluated in response to significant changes in a resident’s status or at least every 90 days. Surveyors found that this process was not followed for residents receiving respiratory care and for a resident with a history of falls. For one resident with diagnoses including Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease and non-Alzheimer’s dementia, a quarterly Minimum Data Set (MDS) assessment documented that the resident was receiving oxygen therapy. The resident’s Respiratory Conditions Comprehensive Care Plan, initiated in June 2023, included a goal to remain free from signs and symptoms of respiratory distress for 90 days, with interventions such as administering oxygen as needed and elevating the head of the bed due to shortness of breath when lying flat. This care plan was last updated in December 2025 and was not revised following the resident’s quarterly MDS assessment in March 2026. Interviews with the unit manager LPN, the Assistant Director of Nursing, and the Director of Nursing confirmed that nurse managers and supervisors were responsible for quarterly updates and that they were unaware or unable to explain why the respiratory care plan had not been updated. For another resident with dementia, syncope and collapse, and gait and mobility abnormalities, the MDS documented severe cognitive impairment, a history of falls, and a fracture related to a fall. A falls/injury comprehensive care plan was initiated in January 2022 for physical performance limitations, with interventions such as anticipating needs, monitoring activities, and monitoring risk factors. The care plan notes documented multiple prior falls over 2022–2024, but the interventions were not updated in response to these incidents. In June 2025, the resident sustained another fall in the hallway, resulting in a visible laceration above the right eyebrow, and the care plan documented that the resident had been leaning forward and fell from a wheelchair; however, there was no evidence that fall-prevention interventions were reviewed or revised after this event. The CNA assignment sheet from April 2025 showed the resident required extensive assistance of two staff for transfers and only listed a tab alarm on chair and bed for fall prevention. Interviews with nursing staff and leadership indicated that care plans were expected to be updated quarterly, annually, with significant changes, and as needed, but confirmed that no new fall-prevention interventions were added and that responsibility for updating care plans rested with unit managers, LPNs, and RNs.
Penalty
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