Failure to Obtain Immediate Physician Orders for Foley, Colostomy, and Wound Care on Readmission
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to obtain and implement physician orders for a resident’s immediate care upon readmission, specifically for a Foley catheter, colostomy, and complex wound care. The resident was an adult male, cognitively intact with a BIMS score of 15, who had a urinary catheter, a colostomy, and abscesses in the groin and perineal areas. His care plan identified him as a new admission post-sepsis with goals to identify immediate health and safety needs and approaches that included catheter use for wound management, turning and repositioning, and treatments per physician orders; however, the colostomy was not identified in the care plan. The hospital discharge orders did not contain specific orders for wound care, Foley catheter care, or colostomy care, and only instructed that detailed wound care instructions be sent with the patient and that the wound vac be continued in the skilled nursing facility, along with a recommendation for frequent repositioning and pressure offloading. Record review showed that the resident’s April physician order summary contained no orders for urinary catheter or colostomy care, and wound care orders were not entered until several days after readmission. Nursing progress notes documented that the resident returned from the hospital with a wound vac in place and that the initial skin and systems assessment was deferred at the time of arrival. A later skin assessment documented surgical wounds to the coccyx, additional wounds on the perineum and scrotum, a skin-grafted site on the right upper leg, and suture markings on both upper inner thighs, as well as the dates of the last Foley and colostomy bag changes. Subsequent nursing notes described the resident’s colostomy and indwelling catheter as intact and noted the wound vac settings, but there were still no corresponding physician orders for catheter or colostomy care at that time. Interviews with staff confirmed that no wound care, Foley catheter, or colostomy care orders were obtained at the time of readmission. The treatment nurse stated that the hospital had not sent wound care orders and that she later obtained wound care orders from the facility’s wound care physician to resume previous orders, and then separately obtained wound vac orders, acknowledging that she should have restarted prior orders sooner. She also stated that the resident did receive wound care on two days that was not documented. The admitting RN reported that he did not think to call the physician to restart previous wound, urinary catheter, or colostomy orders, did not know who the wound care physician was, and did not contact the treatment nurse or the hospital to obtain orders. The clinical services director stated it was the facility’s expectation that any admitted resident must have orders for necessary care, including wound, urinary catheter, and colostomy care, and that daily orders needed to be clarified immediately. The facility’s own policy on physician orders required that a nurse review transfer records, call the physician to confirm and request additional orders as needed, and ensure that upon admission the facility had physician orders for the resident’s immediate care, but this process was not followed for this resident. The report states that this failure to have physician orders for the resident’s Foley catheter, colostomy, and wound care upon readmission could place the resident at risk for not receiving appropriate care and treatment services. The treatment nurse further stated that the risk of not having orders upon admission was that wounds might not receive treatment and could decline or become infected, and that colostomy and urinary catheter care could be missed, increasing the risk of infections. The clinical services director similarly stated that not having admission orders could delay treatments and result in a decline in the resident’s overall well-being and recovery.
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