Failure to Inform Resident/Family of Diabetes Medication Change and Obtain Consent
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure that a resident and the resident’s family member were informed of and allowed to participate in decisions regarding a significant change in diabetes treatment. The resident was an elderly male with multiple diagnoses including dementia, dysphagia, type 2 diabetes mellitus, hypothyroidism, protein-calorie malnutrition, muscle wasting, acute kidney failure, adult failure to thrive, hemiplegia/hemiparesis, and muscle weakness. His MDS indicated he was rarely or never understood and required substantial assistance with eating, oral hygiene, and personal hygiene. His care plan for diabetes included providing diabetes medications as ordered and monitoring and documenting side effects and effectiveness. Record review showed that the resident had been receiving Lantus (insulin glargine) 8 units subcutaneously at bedtime for diabetes until it was discontinued in mid-January and replaced with Metformin. Orders reflected a sequence of Metformin prescriptions: Metformin 500 mg twice daily, then Metformin 1000 mg every morning and at bedtime, followed by a later order to restart insulin glargine 6 units at bedtime with parameters to hold for blood sugar less than 100. Medication administration records for January and February showed that medications were administered as ordered. The facility’s own resident rights policy required that residents be informed of and participate in their treatment, including being informed by the physician or other practitioner of the risks and benefits of proposed care, treatment alternatives, and options, and being allowed to choose their preferred option. During interviews, the family member reported that the resident had been on insulin for a long time without issues and that, in mid-January, the NP discontinued insulin and started Metformin without informing the family or obtaining consent. The family member stated the resident was on Metformin for about two weeks and then developed swollen lips and throat, decreased appetite, dysphagia, stomach ulcers, and other complications, and that she would not have allowed the change had she been informed. In a separate interview, the NP acknowledged that she changed the resident’s insulin to Metformin for better diabetes control, based on the resident’s inconsistent blood sugar levels and her assessment that it was safe to start Metformin. She stated she did not consult the family before making the change, admitted this was a mistake, and acknowledged that it was the resident’s and family’s right to know about any change in the treatment plan and to have the risks, benefits, and therapeutic rationale discussed with them. The MD stated he was aware of the Metformin incident and that the NP was supposed to discuss any change in the treatment plan with the family and obtain their consent before initiating it. He indicated that the NP did not discuss the change with him beforehand and that, had she done so, he would have advised her to obtain the family’s consent as part of resident rights. The DON confirmed that the resident’s insulin was changed to Metformin and that the NP did not communicate this change to the family member, who later complained. Nursing staff interviewed described that residents have the right to know what medications they are taking, to be informed of changes, to understand effects and side effects, to be informed of alternative therapies, and to accept or decline medications. The ADM stated that the incident involved a failure to inform the family member of a change in the treatment plan and that the NP did not inform the resident and family about the change, which he identified as inappropriate. These findings collectively show that the facility failed to ensure the resident and family were informed in advance of the risks, benefits, and alternatives of the change from insulin to Metformin and to obtain their consent, in violation of the facility’s resident rights policy.
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