Failure to Notify Physician and MPOA of Resident’s Behavioral Change and Mattress-on-Floor Intervention
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to immediately consult with a resident’s physician and medical power of attorney (MPOA) when there was a deterioration in the resident’s physical and mental status. The resident was an elderly female with multiple serious diagnoses, including peripheral vascular disease, heart failure, aphasia, type 2 diabetes mellitus, hemiplegia, cerebral infarction, and end stage renal disease. Her MDS showed a BIMS score of 00, indicating severe cognitive impairment. On admission, an RN documented that the resident was awake, alert, oriented x1, uncooperative, and combative. The baseline care plan behavioral section was blank, and the record contained an MPOA document naming two family members as healthcare agents. On the night in question, staff reported that the resident was up all night yelling, refusing care, and repeatedly attempting to get out of bed and crawl onto the floor. CNA G stated that the resident was difficult, would not stay in bed, and crawled down to the floor where she was restless and constantly tried to move around. A mattress was placed on the floor at the bedside so that the resident would not land hard on the floor, and an RN documented in an admission summary addendum that the mattress was left on the floor because the resident would not stay in bed and was observed sleeping on the mattress, appearing content there. Despite these significant behavioral changes and the use of a mattress on the floor as an intervention, there was no documentation that the physician or the resident’s representative was notified of the overnight behavior or the decision to have the resident sleep on a mattress on the floor. During the following day shift, LVN B received report from the night nurse that the resident had been up all night yelling and trying to get out of bed. On morning rounds, LVN B observed the resident resting quietly on the mattress on the floor and later documented that the resident remained resting, was compliant with wound care, and denied discomfort. CNA C reported checking on the resident multiple times, observing her breathing and appearing calm, and leaving the breakfast tray in the room after being instructed by LVN B to let the resident sleep. LVN B acknowledged she did not know whether the resident had an MPOA and did not verify whether the physician or representative had been notified of the overnight behavior or the mattress on the floor. Later that day, LVN B documented a change in condition: the resident was slow to respond, had audible moaning, required CPR, and was transferred to the emergency room after a weak, thready pulse and inability to obtain a blood pressure. Family interviews confirmed that the resident’s MPOA and another family member were not informed by facility staff about the resident’s restless nighttime behavior or that she was sleeping on a mattress on the floor. The MPOA stated he had visited the resident the prior evening and found her sitting in a wheelchair, smiling, and appearing fine, and that he only learned from another family member that the resident was on the floor. Facility leadership and nursing staff, including the ADON, DON, and RN D, stated that the physician and family should have been notified of the resident’s nighttime behavior, aggressiveness, inability to sleep, and the use of a mattress on the floor, and that they would have expected such notification for a change in condition. The facility’s Resident Rights policy stated that residents have the right to be notified of their medical condition and any changes in their condition. The surveyors concluded that the facility failed to immediately consult with the resident’s physician and representative when there was a deterioration in the resident’s physical and mental status, specifically regarding her restless nighttime behavior, repeated attempts to get out of bed, and the need for a mattress on the floor.
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