Failure to Revise Nutrition Care Plans and Obtain Ordered Weights After Significant Weight Loss
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to revise and update care plans in response to significant weight loss and nutritional risk for two residents. For one resident with anoxic brain damage, traumatic brain injury, legal blindness, psychosis, epilepsy, chronic pain, and major depressive disorder, the RD documented significant weight loss at the 180‑day marker, noting that the resident’s BMI had decreased from an obese range to overweight and that meal intakes were varied. The RD recorded that the resident refused nutritional supplements but would be monitored for continued weight loss and possible need for supplements. Despite a documented weight decrease from 168 pounds at admission to 138.7 pounds, representing a 17.4% loss, the nutrition care plan—last reviewed when the resident was still categorized as obese/overweight—was not revised after the significant weight loss was identified. The record for this resident also showed gaps in weight monitoring, with no weights obtained in two consecutive months, and the comprehensive MDS assessment indicated no significant weight loss, contrary to the later documented weight trend. The existing care plan focused on risk for altered nutrition related to obesity, with goals for adequate nutrition and no significant weight loss, and interventions including supplements per physician orders and RD notification if a 5% weight loss occurred. However, after the RD identified significant weight loss and noted the resident’s refusal of kcal supplements, the care plan was not updated to reflect the new nutritional status, the significant weight loss, or revised interventions. The RD acknowledged during interview that the resident’s weight loss was viewed as positive due to BMI, that she relied on nursing and an NP to notify her of significant weight loss, and that she had not updated the nutrition care plan. For a second resident admitted with acute and chronic respiratory failure with hypoxia, Influenza A, hypertension, heart disease, atrial fibrillation, pulmonary fibrosis, asthma, a pacemaker, depression, pneumonia, congestive heart failure, and oxygen dependence, the physician ordered house supplements with meals, weekly weights for four weeks, liquid protein three times daily, and Juven for wound healing. The RD’s initial nutrition assessment documented a normal BMI, variable meal intakes, no edema, and existing vitamin supplementation, and noted that the resident would be monitored as a new admit. The admission MDS showed the resident was cognitively intact, had two pressure ulcers on admission, and had no known weight loss or gain. A nutrition care plan was initiated indicating risk for altered nutrition related to a cardiac diet, with goals of adequate nutrition, no significant weight change, and no skin breakdown, and interventions including weekly weights for four weeks then monthly if stable. However, no weights were obtained at any time during the resident’s stay, and the RD later stated she was unaware that no weights had been taken and that the care plan should have reflected that the resident was admitted with existing skin breakdown.
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