Failure to Notify Practitioner and Representative of Resident’s Refusals and Enteral Feeding Needs
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to promptly notify a resident’s practitioner and resident representative of significant changes in condition and treatment needs, including persistent refusals of medications, nutritional supplements, and meals, as well as issues related to swallowing and enteral feeding. A female resident with Wernicke’s encephalopathy, carotid aneurysm, dysphagia, and anorexia was admitted with a PEG tube placed in the hospital for long‑term nutrition, hydration, and medication administration. Her hospital discharge summary specified that pureed food was for comfort only and not sufficient for nutrition, and that she should otherwise remain NPO with PEG feeding. However, the facility’s admission documentation did not include an active diagnosis for a gastrostomy tube on the MDS, and an undated, unsigned note in the EMR referenced PEG use and Jevity via NG tube, even though the NG tube had been removed and replaced with a PEG. Physician orders in the facility record included a regular pureed diet “for pleasure food,” an enteral feed order every shift with water flushes, and an oral Ensure Plus supplement three times daily. The MAR showed that the resident refused all three scheduled Ensure doses on multiple days, had no documentation of administration on several days, and was noted as nauseated/vomiting or asleep on others. During surveyor observation, the resident was found seated alone in front of an uncovered, uneaten pureed breakfast tray, stating she was hungry and needed help to eat but no one had assisted her. In a later interview, she reported that staff only flushed her PEG tube with water and that she had not received medications or feeding formula through the tube since admission. She also described difficulty with food sometimes feeling like it got stuck, dislike of the pureed food’s appearance and taste, and selective eating based on her preferences. Interviews with staff revealed that the resident’s refusals and swallowing difficulties were not promptly or consistently communicated to the NP/MD or to facility leadership. RN A stated he had notified the NP at some point that there was no enteral feeding formula order but could not recall when or where it was documented, and he only learned on the survey date that the resident had been refusing Ensure. He acknowledged that refusals of medications and nutritional supplements would be considered a change in condition that should be reported immediately, but he had not reported them, assuming others had done so and indicating he had not been clearly trained on reporting expectations. Medication aides reported that the resident had not been taking medications or Ensure since admission due to inability to swallow, that they tried various methods (crushing meds in pudding, jelly, applesauce) without success, and that they verbally and via handwritten notes informed charge nurses of ongoing refusals, but were unsure whether this was documented in the EMR or escalated further. The DON stated she was unaware that the resident had no enteral feeding formula order, was refusing medications, supplements, and meals, and attributed missed order verification and change‑in‑condition follow‑up to workload and role strain. The resident’s representative reported finding the resident multiple times in front of untouched meal trays without staff assistance and stated they had not been informed of the resident’s medication and supplement refusals. The NP and MD both confirmed they had not been notified of the resident’s refusals or lack of enteral feeding orders and indicated these issues constituted changes in condition that should have been reported. These failures led surveyors to identify an Immediate Jeopardy related to the lack of timely notification and consultation when there was a need to alter treatment significantly.
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