Failure to Notify Physician During Medical Emergency
Summary
The facility failed to immediately notify the physician when a resident with a tracheostomy experienced a medical emergency. The resident, who had severe cognitive impairment and a history of respiratory failure with hypoxia, showed signs of distress when her oxygen saturation levels dropped to 69% on room air. Nurse #1 managed to stabilize the resident temporarily by administering oxygen and pain medication. However, later in the shift, the resident's condition worsened, with oxygen saturation levels dropping to a life-threatening 55%, and she exhibited signs of cyanosis. Despite the critical nature of the situation, the physician and Emergency Medical Services (EMS) were not notified immediately. Nurse #1 was informed by a nurse aide about the resident's deteriorating condition, and although the nurse increased the oxygen supply, the physician was only contacted after a significant delay. The resident was eventually transferred to the hospital, where she was diagnosed with acute hypoxia respiratory failure and a heart attack related to the lack of oxygen. The delay in notifying the physician and EMS resulted in a delay in the resident's transfer to the hospital, which could have exacerbated her condition. The facility's failure to act promptly during the medical emergency was identified as a deficiency affecting the resident's care. The report highlights the importance of immediate communication with medical professionals during emergencies to ensure timely and appropriate interventions.
Removal Plan
- The Director of Nursing educated the Unit Nurse Managers and Nurse Educators that immediately upon being notified of a significant change of status for a resident, the doctor is to be notified.
- Provided the emergency number (Code Blue number) for the doctor to ensure expedient responses by the doctor.
- Programmed the doctor's telephone numbers into the residential unit cellphone to contact doctors during non-emergent times and to call 911 immediately in case of an emergency followed by a call to the doctor.
- Nurses not present will be in-serviced upon return to work by the Unit Nurse Manager, Floor Shift Nurse Supervisor, Nurse Educator, or any lead nurse who has been previously in-serviced.
- New Hires will be educated on this during their orientation period by the Nurse Educator.
- All nursing department staff will be in-serviced on the Code Blue Policy to ensure activation for life-threatening emergencies to include notification of EMS and the doctor.
- Sent an all nursing department staff notification through CareTracker Electronic Data collection and messaging system to report all changes in condition to nurse immediately or activate the Code Blue Policy.
- Staff must read and acknowledge the message in CareTracker prior to being able to complete any documentation in the CareTracker system.
- Direct Care and nursing staff not receiving the message will be in-serviced in person upon return to duty.
- The Unit Nurse Managers, Floor Shift Nurse Supervisors, and the Facility Support Specialist are responsible for tracking the receipt of message and/or in-services and ensure that no nursing staff work until completed.
- The Floor Shift Nurse Supervisor, Unit Nurse Manager, or the Facility Support Specialist and the Home Life Support Assistant (Charge CNA) will in-service the Home Life Support Assistants and all CNAs on the importance of reporting all change in conditions, behaviors, or appearance immediately to the nurse assigned to the resident's living area.
- This information will be discussed during their shift exchange daily and added to the 24-hour shift report.
- A CareTracker message was sent out with a read receipt inclusive of this information for repetitive learning.
- Any staff not trained will be in-serviced prior to resident contact by the nurse manager or designee.
- The Unit Nurse Managers, Floor Shift Nurse Supervisors, and the Facility Support Specialists are responsible for tracking the in-services and ensuring no nursing staff work until completed.
Penalty
Resources
Below are regulatory guidelines relevant to this citation:
Trusted data from CMS and state health departments
Every citation, penalty and Plan of Correction is sourced from public CMS records (latest release May 27, 2026) and official state health department websites — never guesswork.
Trusted by long-term care providers and associations.



