Failure to Follow Tube Feeding Orders and Document Enteral Nutrition and Flushes
Penalty
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide tube feeding care and related water flushes and residual checks according to physician orders and to ensure complete documentation for residents receiving enteral nutrition. For one resident with moderately impaired cognition, traumatic cerebral hemorrhage, seizure disorder, dysarthria, anarthria, and dysphagia requiring G-tube feeding and NPO status, the care plan directed enteral nutrition as ordered. The January and February MARs contained orders for Fibersource HN 375 ml four times daily as a nutritional supplement, 150 ml water flushes with each feeding, residual checks of 5–20 ml prior to every medication pass or feeding each shift, and 60 ml water before and after medications every shift. Surveyors found multiple instances across January and February where feedings, water flushes, residual checks, and pre- and post-medication water administrations were not documented as completed. The clinical record review showed specific missed documentation dates and times for this resident’s tube feedings and associated water flushes, including several lunch and hour-of-sleep doses in January and mid-afternoon and evening doses in February. Residual checks and 60 ml water flushes before and after medications were also not documented on multiple shifts. The Medical Director acknowledged awareness that the resident missed a few feedings and confirmed the expectation that staff follow provider orders as written. An LPN and the MDS Coordinator both reported knowing that the resident had missed some feedings, and the MDS Coordinator stated that if it is not documented, it is not done and that audits were not completed, confirming gaps in both performance and documentation of ordered enteral nutrition and hydration. For a second resident with intact cognition and diagnoses including stroke, heart failure, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, and dependence on tube feeding for nutrition and hydration, the care plan directed flushing the feeding tube as ordered. However, the March MAR did not specify the amount of water to flush the feeding tube before and after medication administration. During an observed medication pass, an RN asked the DON about the required flush amount; the DON left the room and returned stating that 60 cc of water should be used before and after medications, describing this as the standard amount, despite no corresponding order on the MAR. The RN and DON then administered 60 cc water flushes based on this verbal direction. The ADON confirmed she did not see an order for the water flush amount, and the DON acknowledged the lack of a policy directing staff on how to administer medications via tube feeding, while the existing enteral feeding policy only addressed verifying physician orders for formula, rate, and frequency.
