Failure to Follow Wound Specialist Orders and Professional Standards in Pressure Ulcer Care
Summary
The facility failed to ensure that services met professional standards of quality for residents with pressure ulcers when wound treatment orders were not followed as prescribed by wound care practitioners. For one resident with chronic respiratory failure, ventilator dependence, severe cognitive impairment, and multiple pressure ulcers (three present on admission and one facility-acquired), the wound care physician assistant ordered daily and as-needed treatments to ulcers on the right mid-back, sacrum, right medial buttock, right lateral buttock, and left lateral leg. However, the wound care nurse transcribed these orders as more frequent than prescribed, documenting treatments to the mid-back and left lateral leg twice daily and to the sacral and buttock ulcers three times daily. Treatment records show that staff administered wound care at these increased frequencies until the resident’s subsequent hospitalization. The wound care nurse stated they independently changed the frequency of treatments due to observing excessive drainage and purulent discharge, while the wound care physician assistant stated they had not recommended treatment more than once daily and would have recommended hospitalization if they had known the resident required wound care more than once daily. For another resident with chronic respiratory failure, ventilator dependence, hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy, and facility-acquired stage 2 and 3 pressure ulcers, the wound care physician assistant documented an order for Silvadene to a right buttock ulcer. On the same date, the wound care nurse documented that the wound care physician assistant had evaluated the resident and changed the treatment to Santyl ointment, and then transcribed a physician order reflecting Santyl instead of Silvadene. This change in treatment product was not supported by the wound care physician assistant’s written order. The assistant director of nursing, who oversaw the wound care program, reported they could not recall the last time the wound care nurse had a wound care competency and stated that residents with pressure ulcers were being treated more than once daily because dressings became soiled with incontinence, while also acknowledging that treatments should follow wound care specialist recommendations and be provided more than once daily only as needed.
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