Failure to Ensure Clinically Appropriate Discharge with Pending Respiratory Testing
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure that a resident’s discharge was appropriate based on the resident’s clinical status and that the resident was prepared for a safe discharge. The facility’s discharge/transfer policy required coordination of a safe transfer or discharge, documentation of the resident’s current medical status, and provision of written interdisciplinary discharge instructions summarizing the resident’s condition at the time of discharge. For this resident, the transfer/discharge notice stated that the resident’s health had improved sufficiently so that they no longer needed the services of the facility, citing successful completion of sub-acute rehabilitation. However, the resident refused to sign the notice, and the administrator signed as a witness. The complainant reported that as the planned discharge date approached, the resident became increasingly ill and incapacitated and was in no condition to be sent home, and that attempts to stop or postpone the discharge were unsuccessful. The resident had significant medical diagnoses including type 2 diabetes, COPD, pulmonary hypertension, congestive heart failure, chronic kidney disease, and hypoxic respiratory failure. A physician treatment encounter note dated several days before discharge documented that the resident was clinically stable to discharge home with family. In the days immediately preceding discharge, a physician order was initiated for PRN guaifenesin liquid for cough, and the medication administration record showed that the cough medicine was given on two occasions, with one administration documented as ineffective and the next as effective. A physician order was also entered for a one-time COVID/influenza swab, and the MAR documented that the swab was collected by an RN. Staff interviews indicated that the resident had cough and congestion one to two weeks prior to discharge, that the family requested COVID/flu testing, and that a respiratory panel for COVID, influenza, and RSV was obtained because the resident was having symptoms, although staff also stated that symptoms were starting to resolve. Despite the ordered diagnostic testing and symptomatic treatment, there was no documentation in the clinical record explaining the rationale for ordering the cough syrup and COVID/flu swab prior to discharge. There was also no documentation that the results of the COVID/flu swab were obtained or reviewed by facility staff, and no evidence that a medical provider evaluated the resident after the 12/31 treatment encounter to reassess clinical status in light of the new cough and respiratory testing orders before discharge. The RN who collected the swab stated they never received the results and were uncertain if the test was sent out, and the DON stated that test results could not be found. The rehabilitation manager recalled the resident reporting not feeling well around the time of discharge and being tested for COVID/flu. The complainant reported that the resident was sent home while vomiting and very weak, and that the resident’s cough did not improve at home. The resident was sent home on oxygen with equipment and services arranged, and the administrator reported that the resident had no acute respiratory distress at the time of discharge and that the testing and cough syrup were ordered largely at the family’s request. Two days after discharge, the resident was admitted to the hospital from the emergency department with shortness of breath, weakness, and a one-week history of malaise, weakness, cough, and shortness of breath, and was found to have pulmonary congestion, a positive viral panel for influenza, and an elevated heart failure marker, with an assessment of acute on chronic heart failure exacerbation in the setting of viral pneumonia. The medical director stated that influenza testing was usually based on symptoms and that they would expect documentation of the rationale for ordering a COVID/flu swab and cough medicine. The DON stated that if a COVID/flu swab was completed it should have been sent out, and that the order would have been canceled if not completed, but acknowledged that results could not be located. The administrator explained that respiratory panels were being sent to outside labs with a four-day turnaround, so results would not have been available before discharge, and maintained that the resident had no symptoms at discharge. Nonetheless, the record lacked documentation of a provider reassessment after the onset of cough and respiratory symptoms and after the diagnostic test was ordered, and there was no evidence that the pending test results were obtained or considered before proceeding with discharge. These omissions led surveyors to determine that the facility failed to ensure the discharge was appropriate based on the resident’s clinical status and failed to ensure the resident was prepared for a safe discharge, in violation of 10 NYCRR 483.21(c)(1).
Penalty
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