Failure to Assess and Monitor Resident After Hypotension and PRN Midodrine Use
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to assess, monitor, and respond appropriately to a resident’s episode of hypotension and bradycardia, and to provide care in accordance with professional standards of practice and the resident’s person-centered care plan. The resident was an older male with COPD, dementia, depression, anxiety, dysphagia after stroke, cognitive communication deficit, lack of coordination, and a gastrostomy. His admission MDS showed short- and long-term memory impairment, moderate impairment in decision-making, fluctuating inattention and disorganized thinking, altered level of consciousness, wandering several days per week, and a history of two or more falls with injury since admission. His care plan addressed falls with interventions such as helmet use and neurological checks per facility protocol, but there were no identified problems or interventions related to hypotension or bradycardia, despite a documented history of severe hypotension and septic shock in a prior hospitalization where he had been treated with vasopressors and started on Midodrine. In the days preceding the cited event, the resident had a fall with a head injury, was sent to the ER, and returned with negative CT results. The facility initiated neurological assessments after the fall, with multiple entries showing stable vital signs and normal neurological findings. However, documentation gaps were present: there was no neurological assessment entry for one scheduled time on 11/21, and several neurological assessment entries for 11/22 were signed late by a nurse who was scheduled as ADON and whose timesheet reflected only a few hours worked that day. The resident’s routine vital signs from 11/8 through 11/21 showed systolic blood pressures consistently above 110 and pulses above 60 bpm. On 11/22, his day-shift blood pressure dropped to 97/52 with a pulse of 56, and the vital signs log recorded a further drop that morning to 81/48 with a heart rate of 55. At approximately 9:06 AM on 11/22, an LVN administered PRN Midodrine 5 mg for the blood pressure of 81/48 and heart rate of 55, in accordance with an existing order to give Midodrine every 8 hours as needed for systolic blood pressure less than 90. The MAR documented this administration as effective, but the progress notes contained no further assessment or monitoring documentation after the 9:06 AM entry on that date, and there were no additional notations on 11/22 indicating ongoing monitoring of the resident’s condition following the hypotensive and bradycardic episode. The neurological assessment form for 11/22 showed normal vital signs and findings at several times, but these entries were signed late, and there was no contemporaneous documentation of assessment immediately after the low blood pressure and heart rate. The NP and MD later confirmed they were not notified of the hypotension and bradycardia on 11/22. Approximately 21 hours after the abnormal blood pressure and heart rate, the resident developed left-sided facial droop and weakness, was found by staff with stroke-like symptoms, and was transferred to the hospital, where he was diagnosed with bilateral pneumonia, septic shock, and acute metabolic encephalopathy and admitted to the ICU. The facility’s Notification of Changes policy required informing and consulting with the physician when there is a significant change in the resident’s physical condition, including life-threatening conditions or clinical complications, and when circumstances require a need to alter treatment, such as new treatment. The facility did not have a policy for neurological assessments and the Notification of Changes policy did not include guidance for assessment, identification, or monitoring of a change in condition. The DON stated that neurological assessments were used after unwitnessed falls or possible head injury and that vital signs were part of these assessments, but she did not consider the resident’s decrease in blood pressure and heart rate below baseline, along with the need for PRN Midodrine that had not been previously used at the facility, to be a change in condition requiring physician notification, as the medication was documented as effective. The NP and MD both indicated they would expect administration of PRN Midodrine for low blood pressure and would expect notification if the medication was ineffective, but they were not notified of this episode. The surveyors concluded that the facility failed to assess the resident after the blood pressure of 81/48 and heart rate of 55, failed to monitor and assess his condition after PRN Midodrine was administered, and failed to identify and manage this as a change in condition while neurological assessments were ongoing, leading to the cited quality of care deficiency and the identification of Immediate Jeopardy. An Immediate Jeopardy (IJ) was identified on 4/17/2026 at 4:47 PM related to these failures, and the IJ was removed on 4/19/2026, with the facility remaining out of compliance at a lower severity level while monitoring of corrective actions continued.
Penalty
Resources
Below are regulatory guidelines relevant to this citation:
Trusted data from CMS and state health departments
Every citation, penalty and Plan of Correction is sourced from public CMS records (latest release June 24, 2026) and official state health department websites — never guesswork.
Trusted by long-term care providers and associations.



