Failure to Address New Skin Breakdown and Constipation in Residents at Risk
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to identify and treat a new skin condition for a resident at high risk for impaired skin integrity. The resident had diagnoses including spinal stenosis, radiculopathy, type II diabetes, hypertension, a current surgical wound, a history of MASD, anemia, and morbid obesity, and a care plan requiring weekly head-to-toe skin assessments and prompt reporting of abnormal findings. A weekly skin assessment documented on 03/30/25 indicated no skin issues. However, the resident later reported having what she believed to be a blister on the back of her left thigh that tore during a mechanical lift transfer, resulting in a wound that she stated was not addressed by staff despite her request for a nurse assessment. A nurse recalled the resident mentioning a blister weeks earlier but reported not seeing any area at that time. On 04/08/26, observation revealed an area on the back of the resident’s left thigh that appeared dry, peeling, and healing, approximately two by three inches, which an LPN confirmed. Subsequent documentation that same day described a new MASD area on the left posterior thigh measuring eight by 12 centimeters. The resident reported that a CNA had taken a picture of the back of her thigh on 04/03/26 using the resident’s phone, showing the area existed several days before the facility formally identified and documented it. A supervising RN confirmed that if a wound had been found and photographed on 04/03/26, it should have been identified and treated before 04/08/26, when the facility became aware of the skin alteration through the surveyor. This sequence shows a gap between the resident’s report of a skin issue, staff awareness via a photograph, and the formal recognition and assessment of the skin impairment. A second deficiency concerns the facility’s failure to implement interventions when a resident went more than three days without a bowel movement despite being at risk for constipation related to opioid use. The resident had diagnoses including adult-onset diabetes mellitus, generalized osteoarthritis, hypokalemia, depression, and anxiety disorder, and had an order for prn Oxycodone 5 mg by mouth every four hours for pain since admission. Her care plan identified her as at risk for constipation due to opioid use, with a goal of having a bowel movement at least every three days and interventions to observe for signs and symptoms of constipation. Bowel records over a 30-day period showed three episodes where no bowel movement was documented for more than three days: one four-day interval, one eight-day interval, and another four-day interval. During these periods, there was no documentation of any nursing interventions to promote a bowel movement, no laxatives administered, and no evidence of physician contact for constipation management, even though the resident continued to receive prn Oxycodone. The DON acknowledged the extended intervals without recorded bowel movements and the lack of documented interventions, and stated there was no bowel protocol in place, although it was an expectation that nurses contact the physician if no bowel movement occurred within three to four days.
Plan Of Correction
Formatted text (without <text> tags or quotes): 1. Resident #8 had their skin alteration evaluated by the wound nurse and appropriate treatment orders implemented on 4/8/26. Resident #99 had a medium bowel movement documented on 4/17/26 by the STNA and was assessed by the RN Unit Manager on 5/7/26 with no ill effects of going greater than 3 days without a bowel movement. Licensed Nurse obtained physician's order on 5/7/26 for stool softener. 2. Like Residents are identified as residents who have a skin alteration. A full-house skin sweep was completed by the Wound Nurse on 4/23/26 to identify any unreported skin alterations. Utilizing the Skin Alteration Audit Tool which was created on 4/20/26 by the Director of Nursing for the purpose of this POC, an audit of like residents will be completed by the Director of Nursing or designee to ensure that skin alterations are evaluated and have appropriate treatment orders in place. This audit along with identified corrections will be completed on or before 5/13/26. Like Residents are identified as residents who have greater than 3 days with no bowel movement documented as indicated on the clinical alerts via PCC. Utilizing the Change in Condition Audit Tool which was created on 4/20/26 by the Director of Nursing for the purpose of this POC, an audit of like residents will be completed by the Director of Nursing or designee to ensure that residents who do not have a bowel movement documented within three days have documentation in place for appropriate intervention/follow up. This audit will look back to 5/2/26. This audit along with identified corrections will be completed on or before 5/13/26. 3. The Director of Nursing or designee will re-educate licensed nurses and STNAs, including CNA #373 and RN #330 on the Skin Management and Notification of Change Policy to include reporting of skin alterations and notifying the physician of a resident change in status. This education will be completed on or before 5/13/26. The Director of Nursing or designee will re-educate licensed nurses utilize PCC to identify and address clinical alerts related to no bowel movements greater than three days and to follow the Notification of Change Policy regarding physician notification. This education will be completed on or before 5/13/26. 4. Utilizing the Skin Alteration Audit Tool which was created on 4/20/26 by the Director of Nursing for the purpose of this POC, the Director of Nursing or designee will complete an audit of 4-6 residents weekly for four weeks, beginning 5/14/26 to ensure that skin alterations are evaluated and have appropriate treatment orders in place. Noncompliance noted during the audits will be corrected with appropriate treatment orders in place. Audits will be reviewed by Quality Assurance/Performance Improvement Committee for additional recommendations. Utilizing the Change in Condition Audit Tool which was created on 4/20/26 by the Director of Nursing for the purpose of this POC, the Director of Nursing or designee will complete an audit of 4-6 residents weekly for four weeks, beginning 5/14/26 to ensure that residents who do not have a bowel movement documented within three days have documentation in place for appropriate intervention/follow up. Noncompliance noted during the audits will be corrected with documentation in place for appropriate intervention/follow up. Negative findings to be addressed immediately and negative trends or system wide issues will be reported to the QAPI committee, and the action plan will be adjusted as needed.
Penalty
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