Failure to Provide and Document Ordered Pressure Ulcer Care and Prevention for Three Residents
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide necessary pressure injury treatment and preventive services in accordance with standards of practice for three residents with actual or potential skin breakdown. One resident with severe cognitive impairment, quadriplegia, incontinence, and total dependence for ADLs was repeatedly assessed as high or very high risk for pressure injuries and had physician orders for weekly and daily skin assessments, as well as a treatment order for a newly identified Stage 2 pressure injury on the rear left thigh. Documentation on the Treatment Administration Record (TAR) showed that the ordered weekly skin assessments were not signed out as completed on multiple dates, and daily skin assessments and the ordered daily wound treatment were not documented as completed on several consecutive days following identification of the wound. Within four days, the wound that was initially documented as a Stage 2 pressure injury with 100% granulation tissue was re-assessed as unstageable with 100% necrotic tissue. The facility did not complete a thorough investigation or root cause analysis per its own policy to determine factors that led to the development and deterioration of this in-house acquired pressure injury, and the care plan for pressure injury risk was not revised with individualized interventions as the resident’s risk status changed. A second resident was admitted with an unstageable pressure injury to the right heel that was present on admission and had specific wound care orders from the hospital discharge paperwork. Nursing documented the presence and measurements of the unstageable right heel wound on admission, and the physician orders in the facility record included a daily Mepilex border dressing to the right heel. However, when the admission nurse entered the order into the electronic record, no time was selected, so the treatment did not populate onto the TAR and was not available for staff to sign out as completed. After the resident requested transfer to the hospital, emergency room documentation recorded the resident’s statement that wound care to the right heel had not been done. The hospital sent the resident back with new wound care orders for the right heel, but these orders were also not transcribed into the facility’s TAR. The first documented treatment to the right heel pressure injury did not occur until after the wound physician assessed the wound several days later and a new order was transcribed and started. A third resident, dependent for most ADLs, always incontinent, and identified as at risk for pressure injuries, had a care plan that included multiple pressure injury prevention and treatment interventions, including an air mattress and offloading of bony areas. This resident developed an unstageable coccyx pressure injury and a Stage 3 right buttock pressure injury that were documented by the wound physician prior to a hospital transfer. After readmission from the hospital, the resident returned with an unstageable coccyx pressure injury that had developed prior to hospitalization, but the coccyx wound treatment order was not entered until several days after readmission and was not implemented until two days after it was ordered. Although the care plan contained an intervention for an air mattress dated prior to hospitalization, the air mattress was not ordered until several days after readmission and was not placed on the bed until the following day. During observation, the resident’s heels were noted not to be offloaded, despite care plan interventions for offloading and pressure reduction devices. These actions and omissions demonstrate that the facility did not ensure timely implementation of ordered pressure injury treatments and preventive devices for this resident. Across all three residents, the survey findings show that the facility did not consistently complete or document required skin assessments, did not ensure that wound care orders (including those from hospital discharge instructions and in-house providers) were correctly transcribed onto the TAR, and did not timely implement ordered treatments and pressure-relieving interventions. For the resident with the in-house acquired thigh wound, the facility also did not follow its own policy requiring a thorough investigation and root cause analysis when a new in-house pressure injury was identified, and did not update the care plan with individualized interventions based on identified risk factors and changes in condition. These documented inactions and documentation gaps led to missed or unverified wound care and prevention measures for residents at high risk for pressure injuries or with existing pressure injuries.
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