Failure to Follow EBP and Hand Hygiene Practices: Staff did not wear gowns or gloves, did not perform hand hygiene, and did not clean an EZ stand lift after providing high-contact care to a resident on EBP with a Foley catheter. Staff also provided toileting care to a resident with open stage II pressure ulcers without gowns, and a housekeeper handled resident-room surfaces and items with unclean hands while cleaning rooms. Facility policy required gown and glove use for EBP, cleaning reusable equipment between residents, and hand hygiene after resident contact and glove removal.
A resident with severe cognitive impairment, TBI, and dementia with behavioral disturbances used a one-piece jumpsuit identified as a restraint intervention to address genital exposure and related behaviors. The EMR showed consent and physician approval, but the quarterly MDS and care documentation did not show whether the garment remained needed, whether less restrictive alternatives had been tried, or whether restraint reduction or elimination had been considered. Staff interviews confirmed the resident had not worn the garment in a long time, and the DON stated there was no restraint-specific documentation form to track its use or reassess the need for it.
Failure to Follow Ordered Urology Consultation: A resident with urinary retention and a Foley catheter had a physician order for urology referral after a failed trial without catheter, but the consultation was not completed. An LPN knew the resident was supposed to be seen by urology but did not know why it had not happened, and the DON and ADON/IP stated the physician was expected to make the referral and that the status was not discussed in later monthly rounds.
Failure to assess, document, and report new pressure ulcers: A resident with a pelvic fracture and intact cognition developed stage II pressure ulcers on both inner buttocks and a new pressure ulcer on the heel. Staff interviews and record review showed the DON/wound nurse did not document the heel wound or notify the MD, did not notify the MD when the left buttock ulcer was identified, and wound monitoring was not completed daily as required by the facility's own process.
Staff failed to follow a resident’s care-planned transfer needs. The resident had severely impaired cognition, a moderate fall risk score, and required dependent assistance with transfers, including a Hoyer lift with 2 staff or a sit-to-stand lift. Two CNAs lifted her by the underarms and pivoted her instead of using the ordered transfer method, and one CNA stated she did not use a gait belt because the resident was too tiny. The DON acknowledged the transfers were improper and unsafe because staff did not follow the care plan or Kardex.
The facility failed to maintain safe bed systems and prevent accidents, resulting in loose side rails, unsecured or poorly fitted mattresses, and unassessed entrapment zones for multiple residents, including one who was legally blind and had a prior brain bleed after falling from bed. Maintenance logs showed incomplete or inaccurate entrapment audits, with several entrapment zones marked not applicable and some residents with rails omitted from audits, while the DON acknowledged missing side rail assessments, consents, and orders. Additional incidents included a resident with post‑stroke weakness who fell from a bed left at waist height, a resident care planned for two‑person mechanical lift transfers who was transferred by a single CNA using an incorrect sling setup, a cognitively impaired resident at risk for elopement who exited through a door with its alarm deactivated and remained outside briefly in cold weather, and a resident on anticoagulants who fell and hit her head after 11 falls in 30 days without effective revision of fall‑prevention interventions.
Administrator A and the DON did not ensure effective management and oversight of resident care and services, resulting in widespread system failures affecting all 45 residents. Surveyors found deficiencies in resident dignity, informed consent for psychotropic medications, self-administration of meds, honoring meal preferences, responses to resident council concerns, protection of health information, grievance procedures, and handling of abuse allegations. Additional problems included missing or inaccurate MDS and PASSR assessments, lack of timely PASSR refiling for new diagnoses, incomplete or delayed baseline and updated care plans, failure to notify physicians of elevated blood sugars, and unaddressed accident hazards related to bed siderails. The facility also had issues with nebulizer and nasal cannula cleaning and storage, siderail assessments and consents, call light response times, controlled substance accountability, medication errors, and improper storage of drugs and biologicals, despite job descriptions assigning the administrator and DON responsibility for regulatory compliance and quality care.
Staff failed to honor several residents’ stated preferences regarding where they undressed for bathing, affecting their dignity and privacy. One resident reported that a CNA repeatedly undressed him in his room, covered him with a blanket, and transported him through the hallway to the shower room, despite his expressed wish to undress in the shower room. Other residents described similar experiences, stating that the CNA did not ask their preferences and routinely undressed them in their rooms before covering them with a sheet or blanket and taking them to the tub or shower room. Staff interviews confirmed that residents, particularly those requiring a mechanical lift, were typically undressed in their rooms and then transported covered, and the DON stated that facility protocol was to follow resident preference, consistent with the written dignity and privacy policy.
A resident reported that a contracted travel CNA placed hands down his pants while he was in bed, which he described as groping and not part of his usual care routine. Two RNs received this allegation; one counseled the CNA but did not notify leadership and did not know the required reporting time frame, while the other, who knew the 2‑hour reporting requirement, also failed to promptly inform the DON or administrator, delaying notification to state authorities and omitting contact with law enforcement and the ombudsman. In a separate incident, a resident’s family member reported suspected financial abuse to the social services designee, who informed the administrator, but the concern was not reported to the state agency or investigated as an abuse allegation; instead, the family was only given contact information for outside agencies. These actions did not follow the facility’s abuse policy requiring immediate internal reporting, prompt investigation, and timely reporting of all abuse and misappropriation allegations to the state agency.
The facility failed to complete and individualize baseline care plans within 48 hours of admission for several newly admitted residents. Some residents had no baseline care plan in the EMR, while others had plans that were signed but undated or missing key information such as required assistance levels for ADLs, transfer methods, diet orders, use of assistive devices, and ordered rehab therapies. An LPN reported that nurses initiate baseline care plans at admission, and the MDS/RN acknowledged that staff may not know how to provide care if plans are not resident-specific. The regional nurse consultant confirmed that some residents lacked individualized baseline care plans and that the facility likely did not have signed baseline care plans or documentation that copies were provided, despite a policy requiring completion of a comprehensive baseline care plan within 48 hours including physician, dietary, therapy, and social service information.
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