Failure to Revise Wound Care and Implement Pressure Ulcer Prevention for High-Risk Residents
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide pressure ulcer treatment and preventive care consistent with professional standards for two residents with significant skin integrity needs. One resident with chronic respiratory failure, ventilator dependence, severe cognitive impairment, and total dependence for ADLs had multiple facility-acquired stage 2 and 3 pressure ulcers to the sacrum and buttocks. Despite wound care notes over several weeks documenting that these ulcers were stagnant and producing moderate serous to serosanguinous drainage, there was no documented revision of the resident’s treatment plan to address the lack of healing or the ongoing drainage. A nurse practitioner documented that the right buttock ulcer was infected, yet subsequent wound notes continued to describe stagnant wounds with moderate serosanguinous drainage and no changes in measurements, characteristics, or treatment orders for the sacral and buttock ulcers. For this same resident, the facility’s documentation showed additional concerns with basic pressure relief and monitoring. The CNA accountability record for the month indicated the resident remained in the same position in bed for six or more hours on 15 of 25 days, despite the resident’s immobility and known pressure ulcers. The wound care nurse reported that they performed daily treatments and transcribed wound specialist orders into physician orders, but stated they did not document wound assessments until after the wound specialist had assessed the wounds. The DON, however, stated that nursing staff were responsible for documenting wound characteristics daily during treatment administration and referring any changes to the physician. There was no documented evidence that the wound care provider addressed the infected right buttock ulcer or reviewed and adjusted the care plan in response to the nonhealing, draining pressure ulcers. When the resident was transferred to the hospital for severe anemia, the hospital documented a large sacral ulcer with purulent drainage and a wound culture showing multiple organisms, and the sanguinous discharge from the sacral ulcer was described as highly suspicious as the source of the resident’s infection and anemia. The second resident was admitted with acute respiratory failure requiring ventilator support, a history of cerebrovascular accident, severe cognitive impairment, total dependence for ADLs, and an unstageable sacral pressure injury. Admission assessments and the MDS identified the resident as high risk for pressure ulcers, and the care plan called for skin risk assessment, preventive skin care, monitoring for changes each shift, keeping skin clean and dry, incontinent care every two hours, turning and repositioning every two hours, and providing appropriate pressure-relieving devices per PT/OT recommendations. A wound note documented an unstageable sacral ulcer and ordered Medi-honey with a follow-up wound consult in one week. However, there was no documented evidence that the resident was evaluated for offloading devices to prevent further breakdown, and no documentation that the wound care specialist saw the resident again within a week as planned. Within days of admission, nursing documentation showed the resident initially awake and responsive during perineal care and wound dressing, but later that same day another nurse documented a new abrasion to the left hip and multiple deep tissue injuries to both heels, both ankles, and the right hip. Physician orders were then written for a wound consult for these deep tissue injuries, bilateral heel boots, and topical treatments. Review of CNA accountability records for the admission month showed no documented turning and repositioning assistance in accordance with the care plan, with documentation of every-two-hour turning and positioning not appearing until later in the following month. Staff interviews revealed that CNAs relied on accountability records to determine which residents required turning and repositioning and had no place to document observed skin changes themselves, depending instead on licensed nurses to act on their verbal reports. The ADON later stated they had investigated the resident’s facility-acquired deep tissue injuries and concluded they were unavoidable, and also reported they could not recall the last time the wound care nurse had a wound care competency, while the facility lacked an inservice coordinator and relied on the wound care vendor for wound care education.
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