Failure to Recognize and Respond Timely to Sepsis and Acute Changes in Condition
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide timely assessment, recognition, and response to signs and symptoms of sepsis and significant changes in condition for two residents, resulting in delayed transfer to the hospital. For the first resident, who had been admitted with a surgically repaired hip fracture and was consistently documented as alert and oriented with no cognitive impairment, vital signs on the night before the event showed no physical concerns and a blood pressure of 127/65. Early the following morning, the weekend on‑call provider was contacted about a low blood pressure of 84/49 and ordered holding aspirin and antihypertensives, a stool test for blood, and hourly blood pressure checks. By 7:30 a.m., the resident’s blood pressure had dropped to 80/41, oxygen saturation was 84% on room air, and the resident was unresponsive to verbal stimuli, with this unresponsive neurological status persisting throughout the day. After the 7:30 a.m. change in condition, the primary care physician (PCP) was notified and ordered IV fluids at 100 ml/hr. Subsequent vital signs showed continued hypotension and worsening respiratory status: at 8:00 a.m. blood pressure was 82/38 with O2 saturation 93% on 4 L oxygen; at 10:00 a.m. blood pressure was 85/43, heart rate 132, and O2 saturation 85–90% on 5 L oxygen; and at 11:08 a.m. blood pressure was 79/40 with O2 saturation 99% on 8 L oxygen. The PCP ordered additional IV fluids at 9:30 a.m. and did not order transfer to the hospital until noon, despite the ongoing hypotension and unresponsiveness. EMS was not called until 12:23 p.m., and EMS documented a primary impression of sepsis with hypotension as the primary sign. The resident’s death certificate listed sepsis as the cause of death. The LPN who cared for the resident from 11:00 p.m. to 7:30 a.m. stated he did not remember the resident or events and could not access the electronic record. The LPN who cared for the resident from 7:00 a.m. until transfer stated she did not recall the events, believed she followed the PCP’s orders, did not question those orders, and asserted she could not send a resident to the ER without a provider’s order. When given a scenario similar to the resident’s condition, she did not identify sepsis as a likely outcome and stated she did not know who the facility’s medical director was. For the second resident, who was also consistently documented as alert and oriented with no cognitive impairment and had a full code order, the deficiency involved delayed provider contact and transfer after an acute change in condition suggestive of sepsis. At 8:30 p.m., the resident was documented as alert, responsive, talking, and answering questions. At 9:00 p.m., a CNA reported a change in condition, and an LPN assessed the resident, finding a blood pressure of 78/46 and documenting acute distress, lethargy, respiratory congestion, labored breathing, and intermittent gasping. The LPN later stated she did not know the resident well but had been told the resident was ordinarily alert and oriented and recalled light‑hearted conversation earlier in the shift. She stated she identified the condition as possible sepsis but believed she was not allowed to send the resident to the hospital without a physician’s order and could not explain why she waited almost an hour between assessing the resident and contacting the provider. The on‑call provider was not contacted until 9:52 p.m., at which time an order was given to transfer the resident to the hospital, and the resident was sent to the emergency room around 10:30 p.m. The facility’s own “Significant Change of Condition” policy stated that potentially life‑threatening conditions require nursing assessment and critical thinking to determine whether a patient should be transferred to an acute care setting, and that this decision will be made by a licensed nurse when the patient’s condition is so acute that time does not permit waiting for a provider’s response. The Director of Nursing stated that sepsis had long been a major nursing topic, that nurses in the facility were expected to recognize early signs and symptoms of sepsis and take immediate action, and that nurses had autonomy to use nursing judgment to send residents to the hospital even without a provider’s order, while also acknowledging it would be very hard to say that either resident was transferred in a timely manner.
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