Failure to Timely Assess and Treat Active Bleeding from Skin Tears
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure that a resident received treatment and care in accordance with professional standards of practice when active bleeding from skin tears was not promptly assessed or treated by a nurse. The resident was an elderly female with diagnoses including Alzheimer’s disease, muscle weakness, chronic pain, hypertension, shortness of breath, and gait and mobility abnormalities. Her care plan identified her as having potential for impaired skin integrity and being at risk of bleeding, with interventions including evaluation of skin for integrity and impaired coagulation. She had a documented skin tear on the right distal lower leg with physician’s orders for daily and PRN wound care, and wound assessments showed improvement over time. On the early morning in question, two CNAs were changing the resident and attempting to separate her contracted, crossed legs when a skin tear occurred on her right lower leg, causing significant bleeding. One CNA reported that the resident’s skin was very sensitive and prone to tearing, and that the bleeding from the new skin tears did not stop. The CNA immediately reported the bleeding to LVN A, who was in the same hall administering medications. According to the CNA, LVN A stated she was busy with medication administration and would assess the resident after finishing her medication pass. The CNAs wrapped a towel around the resident’s leg to apply pressure and minimize further damage, but the bleeding continued. The CNA then completed her shift and left, believing that LVN A would address the bleeding. Later that morning, the oncoming RN was informed by another CNA that the resident was bleeding in bed. When the RN entered the room, she observed heavy bleeding from three skin tears on the resident’s right lower leg, with bed sheets visibly wet with blood and multiple bandages saturated with blood before the bleeding was contained. The RN reported that neither she nor the CNA had received any handoff report from the previous shift about the resident’s bleeding. The resident’s representative stated that CNAs had initially noticed the bleeding and reported it to LVN A, but that LVN A did not perform any interventions and left the facility without assessing the resident, leaving the bleeding to be addressed by the next-shift nurse. The DON and the administrator both acknowledged that LVN A did not assess the resident or perform timely interventions to stop the bleeding, and the DON stated that loss of excessive blood is a threat to the resident’s life. The facility’s policy on sufficient and competent nursing staff requires that all nursing staff demonstrate competency in skin and wound care and in identifying, documenting, and reporting resident changes of condition consistent with their scope of practice. The policy also emphasizes that staff must have the skills and techniques necessary to care for resident needs, including basic nursing skills and communication. In this incident, the report describes that LVN A did not promptly triage and prioritize the resident’s active bleeding after it was reported by the CNA, did not provide a handoff regarding the bleeding to the oncoming nurse, and later contacted the CNA at home asking about the severity of the wound, stating she had forgotten to take care of the bleeding. These actions and inactions led to the resident remaining in bed with ongoing, heavy bleeding from multiple skin tears until discovered and treated by the day-shift RN. The resident’s representative reported that the resident had been on long-term prednisone, resulting in very fragile skin and bilateral leg edema, and that her skin was prone to tearing easily. The representative stated that CNAs had thrown a towel on the wound to stop the bleeding and reported it to LVN A, but that LVN A did not intervene before leaving. The representative later met with the administrator, expressing concern about LVN A’s competency and describing that LVN A did nothing to stop the resident from bleeding. The report documents that the resident’s condition was stable at the time of survey, with the wound covered by a dressing and the resident appearing calm and without distress, but the deficiency centers on the earlier failure of LVN A to assess and intervene when the resident was actively bleeding from new skin tears. The investigation also notes that staff had attended in-services on abuse and neglect, reporting concerns, and the importance of shift-to-shift handoff, and that the facility had a policy requiring sufficient and competent nursing staff. Despite this, the events described show that the resident’s change in condition—new skin tears with ongoing bleeding—was not promptly addressed by LVN A, and that there was no communication of this issue to the oncoming nurse. This resulted in the resident being found later with copious blood loss and heavily saturated dressings and linens before appropriate wound care and monitoring were initiated by the day-shift RN.
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