The facility failed to follow physician orders for medications and treatments for multiple residents. One resident did not receive a scheduled IM antibiotic dose as ordered. Another resident with constipation and diarrhea had PRN Loperamide and scheduled Sennosides administered inconsistently with bowel-related orders, and an ordered oral antibiotic was delayed for many days after it was received from the pharmacy, without documented timely provider follow-up. A resident with complaints of SOB did not receive a PRN nebulizer treatment despite an active order. During a med pass, a CNA-M gave a resident 14 pills to swallow at once, contrary to an order requiring meds to be given whole with water, one at a time, in an upright position.
Two residents experienced deficiencies in clinical record documentation when multiple active physician orders for medications, treatments, monitoring, positioning, and meal-related care were not documented as completed on the MAR/TAR, and when a provider progress note contained outdated wound care and foley catheter information that did not match current orders. The DON confirmed that the records lacked evidence of completion for ordered interventions and that the provider note did not accurately reflect the resident’s current wound care regimen.
The facility failed to develop and maintain complete, accurate care plans for two residents. One resident with a diagnosis of dementia did not have a comprehensive dementia care plan in place, as confirmed by record review and the Regional Director of Clinical Operations. Another resident with repeated falls and gait/mobility abnormalities, who had sustained an unwitnessed fall resulting in multiple fractures, lacked documented fall-related goals and interventions and had a care plan that inaccurately listed toileting as independent and did not include the toileting schedule described in the facility’s follow-up report; the DNS confirmed that the fall care plan had been resolved despite these ongoing needs.
A resident experienced lethargy, AMS, abnormal VS, and hypoxia with a history of urosepsis. Nursing staff contacted the on‑call provider, obtained orders for STAT labs, oral antibiotics, IV NS, and neuro checks, and applied supplemental O2. After this, the resident was unable to swallow the antibiotic, staff could not start the IV due to lack of supplies, and STAT labs were delayed until the next lab day. The resident’s temperature later increased and the POA requested transfer, leading to EMS transport to the ED for AMS, abnormal VS, and increased weakness. The record contained no evidence that the provider was notified of these subsequent changes in condition or of the inability to carry out ordered treatments, and the Administrator confirmed the physician was not notified.
A resident with Alzheimer’s disease, dementia with psychosis, severe cognitive impairment (BIMS 8/15), history of falls, and documented confusion and hallucinations was placed in a room directly across from an unsecured exit door, despite staff concerns and family reports of wandering-type behaviors. The resident was assessed as zero risk for elopement, and no elopement policy or Roam Alert was implemented even after earlier wandering and a stairwell incident. Video showed the resident repeatedly wandering the hall, exiting through the unsecured door once and returning unnoticed, then exiting again without staff awareness, passing through to a locked courtyard where reentry was not possible. Staff later discovered the resident missing and found the resident face down on snow-covered ground in the courtyard, inadequately dressed for the cold, leading to an Immediate Jeopardy determination for failure to prevent avoidable accidents and environmental hazards.
A resident left their room, exited through an exit door, and was later found outside on facility grounds lying on the grass, after previously being observed in a stairwell and returned to their room while remaining restless. Facility documentation and a SERCA confirmed staff did not re‑evaluate the resident when behaviors changed, did not implement a Roam Alert after the first wandering incident, and had no elopement policy in place. The Administrator and DON acknowledged they knew of the incident when it occurred but did not notify the State agency or submit a 5‑day follow‑up report, as they treated the event as a fall rather than an elopement because the resident was found on facility property.
Housekeeping and maintenance services were not adequately provided in multiple resident areas and the laundry room. Surveyors observed food particles and debris on sit-to-stand lifts, commode buckets and a wash basin left on bathroom floors, ripped or torn floor mats and shower threshold strips, broken and disrepair conditions, chipped and missing paint, dried feces and urine on and under a toilet and seat riser, taped-over holes in a shower wall, and untreated wooden pallets in the clean laundry area. The ADON/housekeeping and maintenance leadership confirmed the findings.
Failure to Report Multiple Abuse Allegations: A resident with Alzheimer's disease and dementia had repeated incidents of aggression toward other residents, CNAs, and a visitor, including slapping, grabbing, pulling, verbal abuse, and attempting to swing a chair. The record and DLC portal review showed no evidence these abuse allegations were reported to the state agency, and the Administrator confirmed the incidents were not reported.
Incomplete Transfer/Discharge and Bed-Hold Notices: The facility failed to provide written transfer/discharge and bed-hold notices to resident representatives for multiple residents who were transferred to acute care. The notices reviewed were missing required appeal information, including contact details for the appeal entity and the State LTC Ombudsman, and lacked instructions for obtaining and completing an appeal form. Staff stated that transfer/discharge and bed-hold notices are not sent to resident representatives and that the bed-hold notice does not include appeal rights or contact numbers.
A resident’s baseline care plan was not developed and implemented within 48 hours of admission with the instructions needed to provide minimum healthcare information for care. The record showed repeated aggression toward staff, other residents, and a visitor, along with wandering, agitation, destructive behavior, and combative episodes during care, but the care plan lacked goals and interventions for these behaviors. The DON confirmed the care plan did not address the concerns.
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