Failure to Honor DNR Advance Directives Resulting in CPR on Two Residents
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure that residents’ advance directives, specifically Do Not Resuscitate (DNR) orders, were implemented as requested, resulting in CPR being performed on two residents who had chosen not to receive it. Facility policy dated 1/17 states that basic life support, including CPR, will be provided when needed, subject to physician order and resident choice as indicated in advance directives, and that CPR is not to be initiated when a valid DNR order is in place. Surveyors determined that the facility did not follow through on obtaining and processing valid physician-signed DNR orders and did not consistently verify and honor residents’ code status before initiating CPR. One resident, R102, was admitted with dementia, anxiety, and cellulitis and had been deemed incapacitated at the hospital. A Power of Attorney for Health Care (POAHC) was activated, and upon admission the POAHC signed a CPR preference form indicating that R102 did not want CPR in the event of cardiopulmonary arrest. The form stated that the physician must provide an order to withhold CPR for inclusion in the medical record, based in part on the resident’s preferences. The POAHC later signed the State of Wisconsin Emergency Care DNR form, which is used to request a DNR bracelet and outlines that only the bracelet identifies DNR status to EMS responders. On the day of the event, nursing notes document that R102 became unresponsive after heavy breathing and a seizure; staff attempted to obtain vitals, applied oxygen, called 911, and started CPR. The ADON later reported that she checked the chart, saw a red cover indicating DNR status, and informed the floor nurse that the resident was DNR, but CPR continued and EMS arrived to find staff performing CPR. The paramedic report for R102 documents that staff stated they believed the resident was DNR but that there was no DNR identification such as a bracelet. Staff produced the State of Wisconsin DNR form, but it lacked a physician signature at that time, and other documents such as the POAHC and living will were also provided. Because the DNR form was not signed by a physician and there was no DNR bracelet, paramedics continued CPR, including mechanical CPR, intraosseous access, airway placement, and administration of epinephrine, until they received confirmation allowing them to stop. The State of Wisconsin DNR form for R102 was not signed by a physician until after the resident had received CPR and died. The DON later stated that if there is no legally signed DNR form by the physician, nurses are required to perform CPR, and surveyors identified that the facility had not followed through in obtaining the physician’s signature despite the resident’s documented wishes for no life-sustaining measures. A second resident, R24, had diagnoses of lung and breast cancer and was cognitively intact per a BIMS assessment. R24 completed a CPR preference form indicating that CPR was not wanted in the event of cardiac arrest, and an Advance Directive for Emergency Care DNR form was signed by the resident’s physician. On the day of the incident, R24, who had a documented fish allergy, was served fish for lunch. During subsequent vital sign assessment, R24 became unresponsive, briefly recovered, then became unresponsive again. LPN-Y obtained an AED and started CPR, and 911 was called. The paramedic report states that EMS arrived to find staff performing CPR with mechanical ventilation and an AED in place. During resuscitation, staff presented a form showing the resident was DNR, and CPR was briefly stopped but then resumed because the document was viewed as only a request for a DNR bracelet and staff stated the resident was not wearing a DNR bracelet. The paramedic report for R24 further documents that, after CPR and life-saving measures were resumed, EMS instructed crew to double-check for a DNR bracelet and one was found around the resident’s forearm under a jacket. At that point, CPR was ceased and the resident was pronounced. LPN-S, the supervisor on duty, reported that she did not know the resident’s code status prior to starting CPR and did not observe a DNR bracelet, and that she would normally look in the electronic or paper record for code status. The DON later stated she did not know why staff started CPR on R24. Surveyors noted that the facility’s own Facility Reported Incident investigation focused on the fish allergy issue and did not investigate the concern that R24 received CPR contrary to the documented no-CPR advance directive. The surveyors concluded that the facility failed to ensure that both residents’ advance directive wishes regarding no CPR were honored, resulting in a finding of Immediate Jeopardy affecting all residents.
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