Failure to Implement Care Plan Interventions for Adaptive Call Bell, ADL Care, and Clothing Needs
Summary
Facility staff failed to develop and/or implement comprehensive care plans for two residents, resulting in care that did not follow identified needs and documented interventions. For one resident with quadriplegia, chronic respiratory failure, tracheostomy, tube feeding, and severe cognitive impairment, the comprehensive care plan identified an ADL self-care performance deficit related to multiple conditions and specified use of a Breath Call adaptive call bell instead of a traditional button call light due to lack of mobility. Surveyor observations on multiple occasions showed the resident in bed with a standard handheld call bell clipped to the blanket and no Breath Call device in place. The director of specialty care and the DON both stated that the care plan is intended to guide individualized care and that adaptive call bells should follow the resident when rooms are changed, yet census records showed a room change prior to the observations and the adaptive device was not in use. The same resident’s care plan also included interventions for daily skin inspection during care and documented that the resident was dependent on staff for bathing. ADL documentation for the month showed baths and upper body dressing only over a limited four-day period, despite expectations from the director of specialty care and CNAs that residents receive daily bathing and gown changes. Clinical records showed orders for a midline catheter and peripheral IV for IV antibiotics, with IV therapy initiated. Progress notes later documented a new in-house–acquired pressure injury in the left antecubital area. A subsequent nursing note described that an RN was alerted by a CNA during bathing that a tourniquet had been left on the resident’s left upper arm, with damaged, discolored, and blistered skin underneath. Interview with the director of specialty care revealed that the CNA who bathed the resident on the weekend had only provided a washup and had not removed the gown due to a lack of clean gowns, which prevented earlier detection of the tourniquet and associated skin damage. For a second resident with vascular dementia with psychotic disturbance, anxiety, rheumatoid arthritis, anemia, insomnia, restlessness, agitation, and major depressive disorder, the comprehensive care plan addressed behavioral issues and specifically directed staff to layer the resident in multiple layers of his own clothes due to his cold nature. Observations showed this resident ambulating independently on the memory care unit wearing only shorts and a long-sleeve shirt, rubbing his arms and mumbling. When questioned, an LPN stated she was not aware that the care plan required multiple layers of clothing and reported that the resident usually verbalized when he was cold. The memory care unit manager stated that the purpose of the care plan was to provide staff with guidelines on resident needs and how to address them, and that care plans are updated with changes in condition or behaviors, yet the observed clothing and staff statements demonstrated that the existing care plan intervention for layering clothing was not being implemented.
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