Failure to Verify and Implement Resident Advance Directives and DNR Status at Admission
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure residents’ advance directives were accurately identified, clarified, and implemented upon admission, resulting in discrepancies between documented code status and residents’ expressed wishes. For one resident (CR#1), hospital records and the admission portal summary clearly indicated a DNR status and receipt of a living will, yet the facility’s baseline care plan and EMR listed her as full code. Her advance directives section in the facility record was blank, and there was no admission packet or agreement on file. Physician orders initially documented her as full code, and although a physician progress note later reflected both “Full code” and “Advance Directives DNR,” no clear, timely clarification was obtained. Staff did not review the miscellaneous tab in the EMR for DNR paperwork, and no one contacted the POA to reconcile conflicting documentation. On the morning of the event, CR#1 was found unresponsive with no palpable pulse. Nursing staff confirmed her status as full code using the EMR banner and initiated CPR, which continued until EMS arrival and transport to the hospital. EMS continued resuscitative efforts, including intubation and mechanical CPR, until the POA notified hospital staff that the resident’s wishes were DNR, at which point resuscitation was stopped and the resident was pronounced deceased. Interviews with family and the hospital case manager confirmed that the resident had chosen DNR status during her hospital stay and that DNR documentation had been sent to the facility prior to admission. The facility did not clarify the discrepancy between hospital DNR documentation and internal full-code orders before the change in condition occurred. For another resident (Resident #1), hospital nephrology notes and the hospital transfer cover page documented a DNR code status, and an OOH-DNR form had been completed, signed by the legal guardian, witnessed, and notarized. However, the facility’s care plan identified this resident as full code, and physician orders alternated between full code and DNR on multiple dates, with changes verified only by medical record review and without documented prior clarification. The medical director’s signature on the OOH-DNR form was delayed, and there was no documentation addressing the resident’s advance directives prior to a late social worker note confirming the RP’s wish for the resident to remain DNR. Interviews with the DON, social worker, admissions coordinator, marketer, NP, and medical director revealed that no specific staff member was clearly responsible for verifying and reconciling advance directives at admission, that the DON did not review clinicals before or after admission, and that the admissions coordinator did not provide or review the admission packet containing advance directive acknowledgements with CR#1’s POA. These systemic gaps led to residents being treated as full code despite prior DNR designations and without timely clarification of discrepancies in their advance directive documentation. The facility’s own staff acknowledged that the admission process for advance directives was fragmented and that responsibilities were unclear. The DON stated there was no specific staff responsible for ensuring residents’ wishes and code status were accurately entered at admission and that she did not investigate CR#1’s code status concerns or audit advance directives after the incident. The social worker confirmed she only verified code status at the 72-hour care plan and did not review admission documentation or contact CR#1’s POA before the resident’s death. The admissions coordinator admitted she did not send an admission packet to CR#1’s POA, did not review its contents with responsible parties, and did not recognize that the packet contained advance directive acknowledgements. The administrator and medical director both described failures in communication, documentation, and timely clarification of discrepancies, and the facility later identified additional residents whose DNR status could not be confirmed and whose code status had been changed to full code while verification was pending.
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