Failure to Assess and Treat New Right‑Leg Wound After Fall
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide timely and thorough assessment, monitoring, treatment, and physician notification for a resident’s new right‑leg condition following a fall-related injury. The resident, who was cognitively intact, morbidly obese with a very high BMI, dependent for ADLs and bed mobility, and at risk for falls and skin integrity issues, fell out of bed during incontinent care provided by one CNA. Initial facility documentation on the day of the fall noted no visible injuries, but later that day the resident reported right‑leg pain, portable x‑rays could not be completed due to pain, and she was transferred to the hospital. The hospital identified significant right‑leg pain and diagnosed a contusion of the right lower extremity without fracture before discharging her back to the facility. When the resident returned to the facility in the early morning hours after the hospital visit, nursing documentation described the right lower extremity as red and shiny with moderate drainage. Despite this documented change, there was no wound assessment, no measurements, no description of wound size or characteristics, no evaluation of the drainage, no monitoring parameters, no treatment orders, and no physician notification. From the following day through several subsequent days, progress notes reflected increasing clinical concerns such as pain, confusion, abnormal oxygen saturations, and multiple lab and diagnostic orders, but there was no further mention or documentation of the right‑leg redness or any focused assessment of the leg, even though the earlier finding had been recorded. During this period, the resident ultimately required transfer to the hospital and ICU admission for sepsis, but the facility records did not connect or document the right‑leg condition as part of the ongoing assessment. After the resident later returned from the hospital, staff documented discoloration of the right lower extremity and, the next day, noted a weeping area on the inner right calf and a black weeping wound under the right calf. The resident repeatedly refused measurement and dressing of the wound and refused hygiene and some care despite education on the importance of wound care and hygiene; the NP was notified of her refusals. Later that same day, staff documented a necrotic area on the right lower extremity measuring 5.5 cm by 7.5 cm by 0.1 cm, which was cleansed and dressed, and a care plan was created for an actual skin impairment to the right lower leg. A subsequent wound care consultation identified a posterior right lower extremity wound, attributed to the earlier fall, measuring 9.1 cm by 10.1 cm with undetermined depth. Interviews with the resident and staff confirmed that the leg wound developed after the fall and that there had been no skin assessments, follow‑up documentation, or physician notification regarding the right lower extremity when the red, swollen, draining area was first documented after readmission. The facility’s own pressure injury prevention and management policy required systematic identification, assessment, documentation, treatment, monitoring, and provider notification for all skin integrity concerns, including new wounds and changes in condition, but these steps were not carried out for this resident’s right‑leg condition. The deficiency resulted in the worsening of the untreated right‑leg condition, which progressed to an open necrotic wound requiring hospitalization, surgical debridement, and treatment for sepsis. The resident reported that she had been pushed out of bed during care, injured her leg, and that the wound was not healing, leaving her at risk of losing her leg. Facility nursing leadership and LPNs acknowledged that the leg wound began as a hematoma and cellulitis after the fall, that it became necrotic and required debridement, and that there had been no proper assessment, monitoring, treatment, or documentation of the right lower extremity when the red, swollen, draining area was first observed after the resident’s return from the hospital. They also confirmed that the skin issue was not the focus of care at that time and that the facility did not follow its own policy requiring prompt and systematic management of new skin integrity concerns.
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