Failure to Monitor and Intervene for Diabetic Resident With Acute Change in Condition
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to promptly assess, identify, monitor, and intervene when a resident with diabetes mellitus type 2 and acute kidney injury experienced an acute emergent change in condition. The resident had a known history of diabetes, hypoglycemia, and recent hospitalizations for hypoglycemia, including a documented emergency room visit where their finger stick blood sugar was 36 and a subsequent hospital stay for hypoglycemia. Despite these known conditions, the comprehensive admission assessment and care plan did not include interventions for diabetes mellitus type 2 or acute kidney injury. The resident was prescribed Metformin and glimepiride, both blood sugar–lowering medications, as well as PRN Glutose gel and glucagon for low blood sugar, but there were no parameters in the orders specifying at what blood glucose level these PRN medications should be administered. An undated vital sign log showed there was no finger stick blood sugar monitoring for the resident over a multi-day period, even though the resident had diabetes and a recent history of hypoglycemia-related hospitalizations. The DON later acknowledged there were no physician orders to monitor the resident’s finger stick blood sugar, but stated monitoring should have been done because of the diabetes diagnosis. Nursing staff interviews further showed that an LPN did not recall monitoring the resident’s finger stick blood sugar, and the nurse practitioner stated they expected the facility to monitor the resident’s blood sugars given the diagnosis and prior hypoglycemic events. The nurse practitioner also reported that the only notifications of changes in the resident’s condition they received were on days when the resident was seen in person, and they did not recall being notified of abnormally low vital signs on the critical dates. The facility also failed to appropriately respond to and document interventions for the resident’s abnormal and critical vital signs. A vital sign log documented a blood pressure of 73/47 and oxygen saturation of 84% on room air, with no corresponding documentation of any intervention in the health record. Later, a nurse’s note recorded that the resident was unable to be aroused, with a blood pressure of 81/59, pulse of 41, 3+ pitting edema in both arms, and cold, purple fingers; the physician was notified and ordered a 500 cc normal saline bolus with instructions to send the resident to the emergency room if there was no improvement. Another vital sign entry showed a pulse of 48, but there was no documentation that the physician was notified of this abnormal pulse. The LPN stated they would notify a provider for a pulse less than 60 and claimed to have notified the nurse practitioner about the pulse of 48, but could not locate any documentation of this notification and did not notify the family. Subsequently, a nurse’s note documented that the resident was found unresponsive with a pulse of 28 and was sent to the emergency room, where they were found to have a blood pressure of 71/44, temperature of 88.2°F, blood glucose less than 20, and were described as ill-appearing, verbally and physically unresponsive, critically ill with low blood pressure, and with a high likelihood of death. The resident was later identified as actively dying, returned to the facility, and expired, with the death certificate listing protein calorie malnutrition, cognitive impairment disorder, and acute kidney failure as the cause of death, and diabetes mellitus as a significant contributing condition. The facility’s own Change of Condition policy defined an acute change of condition as a sudden, clinically important deviation from baseline that, without intervention, may result in complications or death, and required staff to clearly document symptoms, condition changes, physician notifications, actions taken, and patient responses. However, the record review showed multiple instances where abnormal vital signs and significant changes in condition were either not followed by documented interventions or not accompanied by documented provider notification. The ADON stated they would report a blood pressure less than 110/60 and oxygen saturation less than 90% to a provider and claimed to have notified the nurse practitioner about the resident’s blood pressure of 73/47 and oxygen saturation of 84%, but could not recall whether they spoke directly or left a message and could not recall any resulting orders, and there was no documentation of this notification. These documented omissions and inconsistencies in monitoring, assessment, and communication regarding the resident’s diabetes, hypoglycemia risk, and abnormal vital signs formed the basis of the deficiency. The situation was determined by the state survey agency to constitute immediate jeopardy related to the facility’s failure to adequately monitor finger stick blood sugars and intervene for a resident with diabetes mellitus type 2 who was found unresponsive with hypoglycemia, and also related to the failure to monitor and intervene when the resident experienced a change in condition with abnormal vital signs. The immediate jeopardy determination was based on the facility’s alleged failures in monitoring, assessment, and intervention for this resident’s hypoglycemia and abnormal vital signs, as well as the lack of appropriate documentation and communication with the medical provider regarding these critical changes in condition.
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