Failure to Accurately Code Gastrostomy Tube Status on Admission MDS
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure that a resident’s admission MDS assessment accurately reflected her gastrostomy tube status. The resident, an adult female admitted with diagnoses including Wernicke’s encephalopathy, carotid artery aneurysm, dysphagia, and anorexia, had a PEG tube placed in the hospital and was ordered to remain NPO except for pureed food for comfort, which was not sufficient for nutrition. Despite this, her admission MDS dated 03/30/2026 did not include an active diagnosis for gastrostomy tube status in Section I, and Section K coded her as having a swallowing disorder with a mechanically altered diet, without reflecting her PEG-dependent nutritional status. Record review showed hospital discharge orders specifying a regular diet with pureed texture for comfort only and that the resident had a PEG and should remain NPO otherwise. The facility’s physician orders included a pureed diet for pleasure food and an enteral feed order with scheduled water flushes through the enteral tube every shift, indicating that the PEG tube was in use for hydration and enteral care. However, the resident’s diagnosis list in the EMR did not include gastrostomy status at the time of the admission MDS, and this omission carried through to the MDS coding, which failed to capture the presence of the gastrostomy tube. During observation, the resident was seen seated in a wheelchair with a breakfast tray containing pureed foods and liquids, stating she needed help eating and that no one had assisted her. In a subsequent interview in her room, she reported having had a tube placed in her stomach in the hospital and stated that staff pushed water through the tube daily but did not administer medications or feeding formulas through it. Interviews with the DON and the MDS nurse confirmed that the admitting nurse was responsible for entering diagnoses, that the MDS nurse was responsible for ensuring accurate diagnoses and coding, and that the resident should have had a diagnosis for gastrostomy status. The MDS nurse acknowledged that the omission of the gastrostomy diagnosis and failure to code the gastrostomy tube on the admission MDS was an oversight, despite using the RAI manual as guidance for accurate completion of the MDS.
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