Failure to Ensure Safe Discharge Planning and Follow-Up for a Resident Discharged Home Alone
Penalty
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure that a resident’s transfer/discharge plan met his needs and preferences and that he was adequately prepared and supported for a safe discharge to the community. The resident was an older male admitted after a stroke for medical management and rehabilitation, with a history of encephalopathy, muscle weakness, gait and mobility abnormalities, Type 2 DM on insulin, chronic heel ulcers, and hypertension. While in the facility, he was incontinent of bladder and bowel and wore disposable briefs. Prior to the stroke, he lived alone with community supports including a care coordinator, meals on wheels, transportation, a life alert system, help from a neighbor with groceries, and a friend who cleaned his house. He did not have a power of attorney. During the stay, an interdisciplinary care conference note documented that the resident would be discharged “home with family,” that he lived alone but had community services and a health coordinator, and that he would return home with established services and home health PT/OT/nursing. The discharge planning section inaccurately indicated that he had family and identified a wife as the primary caregiver, and it documented an intervention to evaluate and discuss prognosis, limitations, risks, benefits, and needs for independence. However, the resident did not have a wife or family caregiver, and the private hire caregiver was arranged by the facility. There was no evidence that the facility discussed with the resident the prognosis for independent living with minimal supervision, his limitations, or that he fully understood the risks. There was also no evidence that the provider was aware that the final discharge arrangement would involve only minimal supervision rather than the ordered level of care. The resident’s discharge orders specified a need for 24-hour care and home health services including PT, OT, speech therapy, nursing, and medication management, and therapy documentation indicated he was not safe to be home alone and required increased assistance at home. PT and OT notes recommended 24/7 care or at least a caregiver for 20 hours per week, and the resident’s modified Barthel ADL score reflected moderate dependence. The discharge MDS showed he required partial/moderate assistance for several ADLs and supervision or touching assistance for transfers and mobility, but it documented him as always continent despite nursing documentation of multiple episodes of urinary and bowel incontinence in the week prior to discharge. The social services assistant confirmed the resident had no family or full-time caregiver, knew there would be a lag before community services resumed, and arranged a private hire caregiver for only two hours per day without knowing the caregiver’s qualifications. She acknowledged that the resident needed to be checked on daily and that he required daily insulin injections, which she stated nursing was responsible to ensure could be safely managed, but the facility could not provide evidence that the resident was competent to self-inject insulin or that a capable caregiver was identified and trained. Additional documentation and interviews showed that the care coordinator had informed the social services assistant that the resident had no support at home and that community services such as meals on wheels would not resume immediately, and that home health evaluation and possible services would not start until several days after discharge. The social services assistant did not document her discharge planning communications with the care coordinator in the medical record at the time and later produced a retrospective typed note. The friend who cleaned the resident’s home reported that upon discharge he struggled to get out of a chair, walked slowly, had frequent accidents on the floor, and could not figure out how to set his insulin pen correctly. The PT and OT confirmed that the resident had memory issues, was not at his pre-stroke baseline, could not change his own brief, and still needed assistance and cues for toileting and hygiene. The DON stated that nursing was responsible to ensure the resident could self-inject insulin or that a trained caregiver was identified, and confirmed the facility lacked evidence of such competence or caregiver training. The deficiency also included a failure to ensure appropriate follow-up for an ordered diagnostic test prior to discharge. Nursing documentation showed the resident had persistent diarrhea and stomach upset, and a stool culture and O&P were ordered along with a probiotic. The laboratory later reported that the stool sample was received in a sterile container instead of stool media, was no longer stable for testing, and that the resident was no longer at the facility so recollection was not needed. There was no documentation that the provider, primary medical doctor, or resident was notified that the stool culture was not completed. The DON confirmed that the stool culture and sensitivity had not been done and that the provider should have been notified to ensure follow-up after discharge.
