Failure to Accurately Document Key Events in Resident Medical Records
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to maintain accurate, complete medical records in accordance with its own documentation policy and accepted professional standards for two residents. For the first resident, who had long-term placement, dementia, mild intellectual disability, ESRD on dialysis, and significant behavioral issues, the facility did not document multiple key events in the electronic clinical record. There was no documentation of the resident’s move from a private room to a semi-private room in July 2025, despite the Executive Director stating this move and a prior altercation with a roommate influenced later decisions about room placement and readmission. The record also lacked any written notification to the resident’s responsible party or the LTC Ombudsman regarding the resident’s discharge when she was sent to the hospital on 2/02/26 for shortness of breath and low oxygen saturation. The facility further failed to document in the first resident’s record that a family meeting was held on 10/09/25 with the Executive Director, MDS nurse, care coordinator, DON, local ombudsman, PASRR supervisor, nurse practitioner, and the resident’s guardian to discuss the need to discharge the resident to another LTC facility. Participants, including the Executive Director and MDS nurse, confirmed the meeting occurred and that it was convened to explain why the resident should be discharged and why the facility believed it could not meet her needs, but they acknowledged that no notes of this meeting were entered into the clinical record. Additionally, when the resident was hospitalized with pneumonia beginning 2/02/26 and was later ready for discharge, the Executive Director informed hospital staff on 2/14/26 that the resident would not be re-admitted due to lack of an appropriate bed and his decision that she could not have a roommate; this communication and decision were not documented in the resident’s record. The Executive Director also acknowledged there was no documentation of offering a bed-hold, no 30-day discharge notice, and no record entry when the guardian came on 2/17/26 to pick up the resident’s belongings, nor any signed personal inventory form or grievance documentation when the guardian reported missing clothing and tennis shoes. For the second resident, who had ESRD on dialysis, diabetes, hypertension, moderate cognitive impairment, and poor vision, the facility failed to document a reported loss of the resident’s cell phone. The receptionist received a call from the dialysis center reporting that the resident stated his cell phone was missing; she wrote the concern on a sticky note and gave it to a nurse, but did not complete a grievance or concern form and was unaware of the grievance policy. The DON later recalled receiving a call from the dialysis center about the missing phone but did not document this in the resident’s clinical record. An LVN also remembered that the resident’s old basic cell phone, which he used to communicate with family via a video-calling app, was lost over a weekend and never found, and she acknowledged she did not document this event. Review of IDT notes and the resident’s record showed no entries about the missing phone, despite the facility’s written policy requiring documentation of events, incidents, or accidents involving the resident in the medical record.
Penalty
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