Failure to Monitor and Respond to Acute Change in Condition Leading to Septic Shock
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to timely and accurately assess a resident with multiple chronic conditions and to respond appropriately to an acute change in condition. The resident had diagnoses including GERD, hyperlipidemia, hypothyroidism, chronic gout, fatty liver, intellectual disabilities, OSA, COPD, fibromyalgia, insomnia, anxiety, diabetes mellitus, and panic disorder. Her care plan identified a potential for altered respiratory function related to COPD and OSA, with goals to prevent respiratory distress and infection, and interventions such as auscultating lung sounds, elevating the head of bed, encouraging fluids, coughing and deep breathing, and obtaining vital signs and pulse oximetry as ordered and as needed. Despite these identified risks and interventions, the facility did not ensure comprehensive assessment and monitoring when the resident’s condition changed. In the days leading up to the hospitalization, the resident and CNAs reported symptoms consistent with infection and decline. The resident stated she had a UTI for approximately two weeks and that she complained for four to five days of being unable to void and feeling unwell, but felt no one listened. CNAs reported the resident complained of itching, burning, frequent urge to urinate, not being cleaned or changed enough, not eating, and not getting out of bed, which was a change from her usual routine of getting up around the same time daily and walking to the bathroom. Staff reported these concerns to nurses and were told the resident would be given medications and monitored, but there was no evidence in the record that these complaints triggered a comprehensive nursing assessment or timely provider notification specific to these urinary and systemic symptoms. Provider orders were obtained on multiple occasions without corresponding documentation of assessment or rationale. On one date, the NP ordered Mucinex and percussive ventilation, and on another date ordered Diflucan and nystatin powder, both without any nursing or NP progress notes explaining why the orders were given or documenting a comprehensive assessment. Later, the NP ordered a chest x-ray, CBC, BMP, COVID test, Doxycycline, scheduled DuoNebs, and BID vital signs with specific parameters for notifying the provider if temperature, blood pressure, pulse, respiratory rate, or SpO2 were outside defined ranges. The chest x-ray subsequently showed diffuse bilateral lower lung opacities suggestive of pulmonary edema, atelectasis, and/or pneumonia, but there was no evidence the provider was notified of these abnormal results. The NP also documented the resident had respiratory congestion, increased temperature, and decreased oxygen saturation, and ordered monitoring of vital signs with instructions to alert the provider if changes were noted, but the facility did not document the required ongoing monitoring or follow-up. On the morning of the acute event, the respiratory therapist and an RN documented that the resident was febrile with a temperature of 102.1°F, tachycardic with a heart rate of 138, respiratory rate of 24, and SpO2 of 83% on room air, with bilateral rhonchi. The resident was placed on 3 L/min oxygen via nasal cannula, and the NP ordered Augmentin in addition to existing Doxycycline, Tylenol, laboratory tests, and vital signs every four hours for 24 hours. There was no documented rationale for adding a second antibiotic or a medical diagnosis to support the treatment, and no documentation that the abnormal vital signs were otherwise addressed beyond ordering Tylenol. After an 8:12 A.M. note showing post-nebulizer SpO2 of 91%, heart rate 121, respiratory rate 24, and persistent bilateral rhonchi, there was no documentation of the ordered q4h vital signs, no evidence of increased monitoring, and no documentation of interventions such as encouraging fluids, deep breathing, or upright positioning. More than ten hours later, an LPN starting the evening shift found the resident in a markedly worsened state. The LPN reported that the off-going nurse described the resident as sick but fine, yet upon walking rounds the LPN observed the resident with eyes rolled back, unresponsive, visibly lethargic, with irregular respirations and increased difficulty breathing. Vital signs at that time showed hypotension with a blood pressure of 55/31 mm Hg, temperature 102.3°F, heart rate 94, SpO2 90% on 3 L/min oxygen, and a mean arterial pressure of 39. EMS was called and the resident was transferred to the hospital. The facility’s own review concluded that nursing staff failed to follow the NP’s order for every four-hour vital sign monitoring, resulting in the resident’s decreasing blood pressure and declining condition not being recognized until the evening, and the surveyors determined that the facility failed to ensure the resident was comprehensively assessed and provided timely, necessary, and effective intervention in response to her change in condition. Hospital records documented that the resident was admitted with severe septic shock, acute cystitis, pneumonia, UTI, acute kidney injury, and acute hypoxic respiratory failure, requiring ICU-level care, vasopressor support, BiPAP, central venous catheter placement, and multiple IV antibiotics. The resident later reported that the emergency room physician told her it was almost too late and that she would have expired, and she described the experience as very traumatic. The facility census at the time was 52 residents, and this deficiency affected one resident reviewed for change in condition. The surveyors determined that the facility’s failure to timely and accurately assess the resident and respond to her acute change in condition resulted in Immediate Jeopardy and actual harm.
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