Failure to Care Plan and Consistently Implement Pressure Injury Prevention and Heel Offloading
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to develop and implement a comprehensive care plan with pressure injury prevention strategies for a newly admitted resident who was identified as at risk for pressure injury. The facility’s Comprehensive Care Planning Policy required a care plan to be developed upon admission based on clinical assessment and identified risk. The resident was admitted after a hip fracture with a diagnosis of peripheral vascular disease, had no pressure injuries on admission, and the admission MDS documented that the resident was cognitively intact and at risk for pressure injury. Despite this, the care plan initiated shortly after admission did not include a focus on pressure injury risk or any pressure prevention interventions until after a Stage 2 pressure injury was discovered on the resident’s right heel. Physician orders and subsequent documentation showed inconsistent implementation of ordered interventions intended to prevent and then treat the heel pressure injury. An order dated shortly after admission required the resident to wear bilateral AFOs during all transfers and when out of bed, but the January TAR showed the AFOs were not in use for 14 of 38 charted opportunities. After the Stage 2 pressure injury was identified, the care plan included an intervention to keep the heels off the bed, and a physician’s order directed the use of heel booties whenever the resident was in bed, with wound care provider recommendations to offload at all times. However, TAR documentation showed heel protectors in place only 7 of 17 opportunities in late January, 17 of 56 opportunities in February, and 19 of 62 opportunities in March, indicating that ordered offloading and heel protection were not consistently carried out. Interviews and observations further demonstrated inconsistent use of heel protectors and confusion among staff about the resident’s ordered interventions. The resident’s POA reported visiting multiple times per week and finding the resident without heel protectors nearly every visit, despite a belief that they should be worn at all times, and noted that a sign placed in the room about heel protectors led to a nurse’s criticism after a fall while the resident was wearing them. On multiple observations, the resident was seen in a wheelchair with a dressing on the right heel and heel protectors not in use, while two pairs of heel protectors lay on the floor. The resident stated she believed she was supposed to wear heel protectors at all times but that some staff removed them and she could not replace them independently. Nursing assistants and RNs gave differing accounts, with some stating heel protectors were used mainly at night or only in bed due to perceived fall risk, and key nursing leaders and care managers acknowledged that all residents were at risk for pressure injuries and that interventions such as heel offloading should be on the care plan, yet confirmed that no pressure prevention interventions were added to this resident’s care plan until after the Stage 2 pressure injury was discovered.
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