Failure to Implement Timely Pressure Ulcer Interventions and RN-Level Assessment
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide timely and appropriate pressure ulcer interventions and to complete weekly pressure ulcer assessments, including staging, in accordance with professional standards for one resident. The resident was admitted with multiple significant diagnoses, including cerebral infarction, heart failure, neuromuscular bladder dysfunction, weakness, and multiple sclerosis, and was totally dependent for bed mobility, transfers, toilet hygiene, and bathing. The resident had an indwelling catheter, an ostomy, and a documented stage IV pressure ulcer, yet the baseline care plan and activities of daily living plan identified a left buttock pressure ulcer without including preventive measures such as an air mattress, pressure-reducing cushion to the wheelchair, or offloading while in the wheelchair. The Braden Scale score indicated low risk for skin breakdown, and the physician’s admission assessment did not include an assessment of the left buttock pressure ulcer. From admission through early April, weekly skin grid pressure assessments documented a left buttock pressure ulcer that was staged as a stage II ulcer and showed progressive worsening in size and drainage. Measurements increased from 3.5 cm by 4.5 cm by 0.2 cm with minimal serosanguineous drainage to 5.0 cm by 6.0 cm by 1.8 cm with moderate serosanguineous drainage and slight odor. During this period, the resident was transferred from a motorized wheelchair, which had a pressure-reducing cushion, to a standard wheelchair for safety reasons, but there were no corresponding orders or care plan interventions for a pressure-reducing cushion on the standard wheelchair or for an air mattress overlay until early April. The comprehensive care plan initiated for risk of impaired skin integrity initially contained no interventions. The weekly skin grid pressure ulcer assessments were completed by an LPN unit manager who was not wound certified and who reported being unable to stage pressure ulcers within her scope of practice, yet she documented staging on the weekly assessments. There was no documentation in the medical record from admission through early April of communication to an RN or physician regarding the assessment, description, and staging of the left buttock pressure ulcer, and no documented RN or physician assessments of the ulcer during that time. The DON acknowledged that the LPN completed the weekly assessments and that there was no documentation of RN or physician verification of staging or assessment, and confirmed the absence of documented preventive interventions such as an air mattress and pressure-reducing cushion until orders were written in early April. Facility policies required complete, accurate, and objective documentation of assessments and services, and the Ohio Board of Nursing information cited limits on LPN practice, including that LPN care is provided at the direction of an RN, but these standards were not met in this case.
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