Failure to Assess and Authorize Self-Administration of Nebulizer Treatment
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to assess and authorize a resident for self-administration of a prescribed nebulized medication despite repeated observations of the resident using the nebulizer without staff present. The resident had a physician’s order for DuoNeb via nebulizer four times daily at scheduled times and had a BIMS score of 12/15, indicating mild cognitive impairment, with diagnoses including anxiety, depression, asthma, history of stroke, drug use, and metabolic encephalopathy. The MDS indicated the resident was dependent on staff for all ADLs except needing substantial/maximal assistance for eating, and the care plan documented impaired cognitive function and the need for cueing, orientation, supervision, and task segmentation. The care plan also included a problem area for infection risk with an intervention to administer treatments as ordered. Surveyors observed multiple instances where the nebulizer treatment was running without appropriate staff administration or supervision. On one occasion, the nebulizer machine was on with DuoNeb solution in the chamber and mist exiting the face mask, which was lying on the bed while the resident lay flat, with no staff present. On another observation, the resident was in bed holding the nebulizer mask about 20 inches from his mouth with the machine running, and later the mask was on the floor with the machine still on, again with no staff present. A further observation showed the resident in bed with the nebulizer mask on his face and no staff present. A nurse stated she had to go back to check on the resident because he had a history of taking the nebulizer mask off during treatment. Review of the clinical record showed no self-medication administration assessment, no care plan direction addressing self-administration of the DuoNeb nebulizer treatment, and no physician order authorizing self-administration, despite facility policy requiring an interdisciplinary assessment and documentation before allowing self-administration of medications.
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