Failure to Follow Physician Orders and Timely Respond to Changes in Condition
Summary
The deficiency involves multiple failures to provide treatment and care according to physician orders and to recognize and respond to changes in residents’ conditions. For one resident with a coccyx wound debridement, physician orders dated in late February directed administration of IV Meropenem every 12 hours until early March and IV Linezolid every 12 hours until a similar date. Review of the MAR showed no documentation that Linezolid was administered on several specified dates and times, and no documentation that a scheduled Meropenem dose was given on one evening. The Infection Preventionist confirmed that if a medication was not documented as administered in the MAR, it was considered not given. Another resident admitted with a UTI had a physician order for IV Ceftriaxone once daily for five days. Review of the eMAR showed that the 6 a.m. dose on one of the ordered days was not documented as administered. A RN confirmed the eMAR reflected that the dose was not given and stated the medication should have been administered as ordered and the physician notified of the missed dose. The DON stated that licensed nurses were expected to administer medications as ordered, document administration in the eMAR, and notify the physician when medications were not administered, and acknowledged that the facility’s process for following physician orders for medication administration was not followed. A separate deficiency involved a resident who reported right ear pain during a care conference and for whom a physician order and IDT note documented a referral to ENT for right ear issues. From the days following the order through a specified review period, there was no documentation that an ENT appointment was scheduled. The resident reported that several days had passed without any update on the appointment and that she continued to experience increased right ear pain. The Social Service Director, who was responsible for scheduling the ENT consultation, stated that the resident had been placed on the next six‑month ENT visit and acknowledged she should have asked the resident about seeing an outside physician and that not scheduling the resident for acute ear pain as soon as applicable had the potential to result in a delay in medical care and worsening pain. The Administrator confirmed there was no documentation that the ENT consultation was scheduled during the review period and stated the consultation should have been arranged in a timely manner. Another resident with morbid obesity, chronic kidney disease, and anemia had an MDS showing intact cognition and a nutritional assessment indicating the resident consumed mostly 25% of meals. An intervention was initiated for health shakes three times daily for 14 days, with instructions to monitor intake, skin, weight trends, and labs. Nutrition reports and meal intake documentation over several weeks showed ongoing poor intake, including multiple instances of 25–50% intake, 0–25% intake, and refusals. Despite this continued poor intake after the intervention was started and completed, there was no evidence of a documented change of condition, no reassessment by the RD, no ongoing nutritional monitoring, no progress notes reflecting deteriorating intake, and no care plan updates. Staff interviews confirmed that such intake patterns should have triggered a change of condition process and physician notification, and the DON stated the facility did not recognize and address the resident’s ongoing poor intake. For another resident admitted with hemiplegia and dysphagia, a physician order was placed for speech therapy evaluation and treatment on the date of admission. The resident’s history and physical indicated the resident did not have capacity to make medical decisions. The record showed that the speech therapy evaluation did not occur until four days after the order. The Speech Therapist stated residents are usually evaluated the day after an order, or on Monday if the order is placed on a weekend, and that this resident should have been evaluated earlier. The Director of Rehab stated that speech therapy evaluations are expected within one to two days of the order and acknowledged the evaluation was not timely. The ADON also stated that if a speech therapy order is placed on a Saturday, the resident should be evaluated by Monday and that this resident should have been evaluated sooner to ensure correct diet texture and prevent aspiration. Facility policy on therapy evaluations indicated evaluations should be completed as soon as possible, with a best practice of 24–72 hours, which was not met in this case.
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