Failure to Ensure Safe Discharge for Highly Dependent Resident
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure a safe and adequately planned discharge for Resident #62, a cognitively intact but highly dependent resident with extensive medical and functional needs. The resident had multiple serious diagnoses, including osteomyelitis, spina bifida with paraplegia, cauda equina syndrome, chronic myeloproliferative disease, chronic kidney disease, peripheral vascular disease, chronic myeloid leukemia, Arnold Chiari syndrome, glaucoma, type 2 diabetes with a foot ulcer, urinary incontinence, repeated falls, and pressure ulcers. Care plans documented that the resident was totally dependent for many ADLs, including putting on and taking off footwear, required setup and cleanup for eating and oral hygiene, and needed supervision or assistance for bed mobility, transfers, toileting, showering, and lower body dressing. The resident also had a colostomy, urostomy, indwelling catheter, and multiple wound care needs, with care plans addressing ostomy management and wound treatments to the sacrum, buttocks, and feet. Record review showed that the facility had multiple treatment orders for wound care, ostomy care, catheter care, and skin protection, with documentation on the MAR/TAR indicating some missed or undocumented treatments on at least one day prior to discharge. The discharge MDS indicated the resident remained dependent or required at least partial to substantial assistance for toileting hygiene, lower body dressing, transfers, bathing, and personal hygiene, and used a manual wheelchair. Despite this high level of dependence, there was no documented evidence in the closed record that the resident was educated on ostomy management prior to discharge, nor any documentation describing how his extensive ADL needs would be met at home. Interviews with nursing staff confirmed that they did not provide education on care or medications, and that the resident required assistance with bathing, transfers, ostomy care, and wound care, with nurses performing dressing changes and medication administration and CNAs assisting with transfers and hygiene. Discharge planning notes showed that social services initially discussed discharge with the resident and a developmental disabilities care manager, with an expectation that Passport Medicaid Waiver caregiver services and wound care services would continue at home. However, interviews and an email from the home health agency later confirmed that the resident’s Medicaid waiver had been lost prior to discharge, and the home health services arranged were limited to skilled nursing and therapy without a home health aide. The home health agency reported providing skilled nursing twice weekly for a foot ulcer and that a third-party wound specialist managed the buttocks wound, while the resident’s wife was identified as the primary caregiver. Post-discharge interviews with the resident’s wife, her caregiver, and the resident’s power of attorney revealed that the wife was blind and developmentally disabled, that the resident no longer had waiver services or a caregiver to assist with daily care, and that he was unable to bathe or manage his colostomy and wound care independently, resulting in frequent soiling and inability to clean himself. The administrator confirmed the waiver was not available at discharge, and the social worker designee acknowledged she had believed the waiver was in place earlier and later learned it had been lost, yet the record contained no documentation of how the resident’s ADL and complex care needs would be safely managed at home. These actions and omissions led to the finding that the facility failed to ensure a safe discharge for Resident #62.
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