Winnie L Nursing & Rehabilitation
Inspection history, citations, penalties and survey trends for this long-term care facility in Cameron, Texas.
- Location
- 2104 N Karnes, Cameron, Texas 76520
- CMS Provider Number
- 676089
- Inspections on file
- 36
- Latest survey
- December 4, 2025
- Citations (last 12 mo.)
- 2 (1 serious)
Citation history
Health deficiencies cited at Winnie L Nursing & Rehabilitation during CMS and state inspections, most recent first.
A LVN failed to follow established fall assessment protocol by instructing a CNA to move a resident with a head injury from the floor to the bed before completing a head-to-toe assessment and obtaining vital signs. Despite prior in-service training on fall procedures, the LVN did not adhere to facility policy, as confirmed by interviews with staff and review of the resident's care plan and medical history.
A deficiency was cited when a facility area was not kept free from accident hazards and supervision was inadequate to prevent accidents. The environment and oversight did not meet required standards to minimize accident risks.
Three residents with dementia and communication deficits were found without their call lights within reach, despite care plans requiring this safety measure. Staff interviews revealed a lack of specific training and policy on call light placement, and observations confirmed that residents were unable to access assistance as needed.
Surveyors found that expired insulin pens remained on a medication cart and expired tube feeding formula was stored in the medication room. Nursing staff and the DON confirmed that these items should have been removed according to facility policy and manufacturer guidelines, but had not been, with responsibility for removal shared among nurses, medication aides, the DON, and the pharmacy consultant.
A resident with severe cognitive impairment and physical limitations was not properly assisted with personal hygiene before a meal, resulting in visible BM on her face and under her fingernails while eating. Staff did not notice or address the soiling until it was pointed out by surveyors, despite the resident's care plan requiring assistance with ADLs and incontinence care.
A resident with severe cognitive impairment, multiple falls, and a care plan requiring a low bed and fall mat was found without these interventions in place. Staff interviews and observations confirmed the absence of a fall mat and improper bed positioning, despite the resident's documented fall risk and facility policy requiring such measures.
A resident with moderate dementia continued to receive PRN doses of Olanzapine after a physician had ordered the medication to be discontinued following a pharmacy review. The discontinuation order was not implemented in the electronic health record, and the medication was administered despite the order. Staff interviews revealed confusion and lack of follow-through regarding responsibility for executing pharmacy and physician orders, leading to the administration of unnecessary medication.
A resident with a history of psychiatric and medical conditions developed MASD that progressed to an open wound, but the RP and physician were not notified of this change in condition until weeks after the initial finding. Documentation and staff interviews confirmed that the required notifications were not made promptly, despite facility expectations for immediate communication.
A resident with psychiatric and medical conditions did not consistently receive or have documented wound care treatments as ordered by the physician. Staff interviews revealed frequent refusals of care by the resident, but these refusals and missed treatments were not properly documented in the TAR or progress notes, contrary to facility policy and physician orders. Leadership confirmed the expectation for complete documentation, but record review showed multiple gaps, resulting in a deficiency.
A resident with MASD and at risk for skin breakdown did not receive all ordered wound care treatments, with multiple missed or undocumented treatments over two months. Staff and physician interviews confirmed frequent refusals of care by the resident, but these refusals were not consistently documented as required by facility policy. The resident's wound worsened, progressing to a Stage 3 pressure ulcer.
A resident with a history of embolism and thrombosis was admitted to a facility without receiving the prescribed anticoagulant Xarelto due to an oversight. The error was discovered after the resident's family noticed leg swelling, indicative of a blood clot. The facility's DON missed the medication order during admission, and a delay in performing a doppler ultrasound further complicated the resident's condition. The error was acknowledged by the facility, revealing a lack of communication and verification during the admission process.
A resident with severe cognitive impairment and a history of falls was found on the floor by a CMA, who failed to follow the facility's fall protocol. The CMA moved the resident without notifying a nurse or the DON, and the LVN on duty was unaware of the incident. The resident was later sent to the ER with a hip fracture, highlighting a significant lapse in communication and protocol adherence.
A resident with Alzheimer's and high fall risk was not assessed by qualified staff after an unwitnessed fall. A CMA improperly conducted a range of motion assessment and moved the resident without notifying administrative staff. The resident was later hospitalized with a hip fracture. Staff interviews revealed a failure to adhere to fall protocols, as only nurses are authorized to perform such assessments.
A resident with Alzheimer's and high fall risk was found on the floor by a CMA, who improperly assessed and moved the resident without notifying a nurse. The incident was not documented or reported to the DON or Administrator, leading to an Immediate Jeopardy situation due to failure to follow fall protocol and ensure proper assessment.
Failure to Follow Fall Assessment Protocol by LVN
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to ensure that a licensed vocational nurse (LVN) demonstrated the required competencies and skill sets necessary to care for a resident following a fall. Specifically, after being informed by a certified nurse aide (CNA) that a resident was found on the floor, the LVN entered the room and observed the resident with a head injury. The LVN instructed the CNA to transfer the resident from the floor to the bed before conducting a head-to-toe assessment or obtaining vital signs, which was contrary to the facility's fall protocol and training. The resident involved had a history of Alzheimer's disease, poor memory, disorganized thinking, and was at risk for falls due to lack of safety awareness and coordination. The care plan identified the resident as requiring moderate assistance with transfers and at risk for falls. The facility's fall protocol, which the LVN had been in-serviced on, required that residents not be moved after a fall until a thorough assessment and vital signs were completed to check for injuries such as fractures or other complications. Interviews with the LVN, CNA, and Director of Nursing confirmed that the LVN did not follow the established protocol, as the assessment and vital signs were only completed after the resident was moved. The LVN acknowledged forgetting the protocol and stated she was aware of the correct procedure from previous training. The Director of Nursing reiterated that the expectation was for assessments and vital signs to be completed prior to moving any resident after a fall, and that the LVN did not adhere to this requirement.
Failure to Maintain Accident-Free Environment and Provide Adequate Supervision
Penalty
Summary
A deficiency was identified due to the failure to ensure that a specific area within the facility was free from accident hazards and that adequate supervision was provided to prevent accidents. The report notes that the environment was not maintained in a manner that would minimize the risk of accidents, and supervision protocols were insufficient to prevent such incidents from occurring. No additional details regarding the specific individuals involved, their medical history, or their condition at the time of the deficiency are provided in the report.
Failure to Ensure Call Lights Within Reach for Residents with Cognitive Impairments
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to ensure that the call lights were within reach for three residents with significant cognitive and communication impairments. Observations revealed that one resident was in bed without her call light within reach, and she was not able to be interviewed due to her condition. Another resident, also with Alzheimer's disease and a history of falls, was observed sitting in a reclining wheelchair in her room without a call light in reach and was similarly non-interviewable. A third resident, diagnosed with unspecified dementia and a cognitive communication deficit, was found sitting in her wheelchair with her call light placed on her bed, out of reach. This resident verbally indicated a need for help and confirmed she could use the call light if it were accessible. Record reviews for all three residents showed care plans that specifically required call lights to be kept within reach as part of ensuring a safe environment and meeting their needs. Staff interviews confirmed that there was an expectation for call lights to be accessible to all residents, regardless of their location in bed or in a wheelchair. However, one CNA stated she had not received any in-service training regarding call light placement, and the facility administrator acknowledged there was no specific policy addressing call light placement. The deficiency was identified through direct observation, interviews with staff, and review of resident records and care plans. The lack of accessible call lights for these residents, all of whom had cognitive impairments and were unable to independently communicate or seek help, constituted a failure to reasonably accommodate their needs and preferences as outlined in their care plans.
Expired Medications and Supplies Not Removed from Medication Cart and Storage Room
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to provide pharmaceutical services that ensured the accurate removal of expired or discontinued medications and supplies from both a medication cart and the medication storage room. During an observation of the secure unit's medication cart, two insulin pens for a resident were found to be beyond their 28-day use period after opening. The pens, a Lantus Solostar and an Insulin Lispro, had open dates and corresponding expiration dates that had already passed, but remained on the cart until they were identified and discarded during the survey. The nurse present acknowledged that it was her responsibility to check expiration dates prior to administration and confirmed that the pens should have been removed. In a separate observation of the medication storage room, eight bottles of Jevity 1.2K tube feeding formula were found to be expired and had not been removed from stock. The DON confirmed that these expired products should have been discarded and stated that the pharmacy consultant had not recently reviewed the storage areas. Facility policy and manufacturer instructions for medication storage and use were reviewed, confirming that the insulin pens should have been discarded after 28 days from opening. Interviews with staff indicated that the responsibility for removing expired products was shared among nursing staff, the DON, and the pharmacy consultant.
Failure to Provide Adequate ADL Assistance and Hygiene Prior to Meal
Penalty
Summary
A deficiency occurred when a resident with severe cognitive impairment, Alzheimer's disease, and an above-elbow amputation was not provided adequate assistance with activities of daily living (ADLs), specifically personal hygiene and grooming. The resident required extensive assistance for bed mobility, transfers, and toileting, and had a care plan in place for incontinence care and ADL deficits. Despite these documented needs, the resident was observed with a brown substance, later identified as BM, smeared on her right cheek and under her fingernails prior to and during a meal. The resident was also noted to have a noticeable odor of BM. Staff interviews revealed that the CNA responsible for the resident's care before the meal stated she had cleaned the resident's hands with a wipe but did not notice the residue on the face or under the nails until it was pointed out by the surveyor. The CNA later confirmed the substance was BM and cleaned the resident after the issue was identified. Other staff members acknowledged the importance of assisting residents with hand hygiene, especially before meals, and recognized the risk of infection if this care was not provided. The facility did not have a specific policy for ADL care, relying instead on a general infection control policy. The observations and interviews demonstrated that the resident did not receive the necessary assistance to ensure proper hygiene before eating, as required by her care plan and her documented needs. The failure to provide this assistance resulted in the resident eating with soiled hands and face, with staff only addressing the issue after it was brought to their attention by surveyors.
Failure to Implement Fall Prevention Interventions for High-Risk Resident
Penalty
Summary
A deficiency occurred when the facility failed to ensure that the environment for a resident with significant fall risk remained as free from accident hazards as possible and that adequate supervision and assistance devices were provided. The resident, an elderly man with dementia, bipolar disorder, aphasia, and deafness, was assessed as having severe cognitive impairment and required extensive assistance with bed mobility and transfers. His care plan included interventions such as keeping the bed in the lowest position and using a fall mat, based on his history of falls and risk factors including gait and balance problems, unawareness of safety needs, and hearing impairment. Despite these documented interventions, observations on multiple occasions revealed that the resident's bed was not in the low position and no fall mat was present in his room while he was in bed. Staff interviews confirmed that the resident did not have a fall mat in place and that some staff were unaware of the specific fall interventions required for him. The resident had experienced previous falls, including unwitnessed incidents where he was found on the floor next to his bed, and documentation indicated that a fall mat was to be used as an intervention following these events. The facility's own fall prevention policy required individualized care plans and environmental modifications such as keeping beds in the low position and using fall mats or similar devices for residents at risk. However, these interventions were not consistently implemented for this resident, as evidenced by the lack of a fall mat and improper bed positioning during the survey period. This failure to follow the care plan and facility policy resulted in a deficiency related to accident hazards and supervision.
Failure to Discontinue Unnecessary Antipsychotic Medication After Physician Order
Penalty
Summary
A deficiency occurred when the facility failed to ensure that a resident's drug regimen was free from unnecessary drugs. Specifically, an order to discontinue an as-needed (PRN) antipsychotic medication, Olanzapine 2.5 mg, was signed by the Medical Director following a pharmacy medication regimen review. Despite this, the PRN order for Olanzapine remained active in the resident's record, and doses were administered after the discontinuation order was given. The resident involved was an older adult male with diagnoses including moderate dementia with behavioral disturbance, hypertension, and vitamin D deficiency. His care plan included the use of antipsychotic medication for behaviors and agitation, with monitoring for side effects and effectiveness. The medication administration record showed that the resident received PRN doses of Olanzapine after the discontinuation was ordered, and there was no documentation that the order to discontinue was implemented in a timely manner. Interviews with facility staff revealed a lack of clarity and follow-through regarding responsibility for executing pharmacy recommendations and physician orders. The Regional Compliance Nurse, Administrator, DON, and Pharmacy Consultant each described gaps in communication and execution of the discontinuation order. Facility policy required that physician orders be reviewed and entered into the electronic health record, but this process was not completed as required, resulting in the resident receiving unnecessary medication.
Failure to Notify Responsible Party and Physician of Change in Skin Condition
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to immediately notify a resident's responsible party (RP) and physician of a significant change in the resident's physical condition. Specifically, a female resident with a history of major depression, schizophrenia, and other medical conditions developed Moisture Associated Skin Damage (MASD) on her buttocks, which later progressed to a non-pressure open wound with drainage. Documentation showed that the MASD was first identified during a weekly skin assessment, but there was no evidence that the RP or physician were notified at that time. The care plan was updated to reflect the skin impairment, but subsequent assessments continued to indicate that no new areas had been communicated to the physician or family. Interviews with facility staff confirmed that the RP was not notified of the resident's MASD until several weeks after the initial finding, when the DON contacted the RP regarding multiple skin issues. The LVN responsible for the initial assessment stated she believed the family had already been informed and admitted she did not recall notifying them. The DON and administrator both stated their expectation was for immediate notification of any change in condition, but acknowledged this did not occur in this case. The RP also confirmed she was not informed of the MASD until the later notification by the DON.
Failure to Document and Provide Ordered Wound Care Treatments
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to ensure that a resident received wound care treatments as ordered by the physician and in accordance with the resident's care plan and preferences. Documentation was lacking for multiple wound care treatments, with several instances where treatments were not recorded on the Treatment Administration Record (TAR) and no progress notes indicating whether the resident refused care. The care plan required staff to monitor, document, and report on the resident's skin integrity and wound care, but these interventions were not consistently documented or followed. The resident involved had a history of psychiatric diagnoses, including major depression and schizophrenia, and was noted to have intact cognitive status. She frequently refused care, including wound care, bathing, and other activities of daily living. Multiple staff interviews confirmed that the resident often declined assistance and that staff made repeated attempts to provide care, sometimes involving family members to encourage cooperation. Despite these refusals, staff did not consistently document the refusals or the care provided, as required by facility policy and physician orders. Facility leadership, including the DON, administrator, and VP of Clinical Operations, confirmed that all ordered treatments should be completed and documented, and that refusals should be recorded in both the TAR and progress notes. The facility's documentation policy required timely and complete entries in the electronic health record, but review of records showed gaps in documentation for wound care treatments. This lack of documentation and failure to follow professional standards of practice led to the deficiency cited in the report.
Failure to Provide and Document Ordered Pressure Ulcer Care
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to provide appropriate pressure ulcer care and prevent new ulcers from developing for a resident with Moisture Associated Skin Damage (MASD) who was at risk for worsening skin breakdown. The resident, an older adult female with a history of psychiatric and medical conditions including schizophrenia, depression, and incontinence, was admitted and later readmitted to the facility. Her care plan identified actual and potential skin integrity impairment related to MASD and outlined interventions such as keeping the skin clean and dry, monitoring and documenting the wound, and following physician-ordered treatments. Despite these interventions, the resident did not receive all of her ordered wound care treatments. Documentation revealed that eight ordered treatments in one month and two in the following month were either missed or not documented. The Treatment Administration Record (TAR) showed multiple instances where wound care was not completed or not recorded as done. Staff interviews confirmed that the resident frequently refused care, including wound care, repositioning, and hygiene, and that these refusals were not always properly documented in the TAR or in progress notes as required by facility policy. Medical records and wound assessments indicated that the resident's wound worsened over time, with the development of a partial thickness non-pressure wound and later a Stage 3 pressure ulcer. The physician and staff noted repeated refusals of care by the resident, and the family was informed of the situation. Staff acknowledged that missed or undocumented treatments could lead to further complications. The facility's policy required complete and accurate documentation of care, but this was not consistently followed in this case.
Significant Medication Error with Anticoagulant in Resident
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to ensure that a resident was free from significant medication errors, specifically involving the anticoagulant Xarelto. The resident, who had a history of chronic embolism and thrombosis, was admitted to the facility with orders to receive Xarelto daily. However, due to an oversight during the admission process, the medication was not included in the resident's medication administration record (MAR), resulting in the resident missing 24 doses over a period of several weeks. The error was discovered when the resident's family inquired about the medication after noticing swelling in the resident's leg, a symptom indicative of a blood clot. Upon investigation, it was found that the Director of Nursing (DON) had missed the Xarelto order during the admission process. The resident's condition was further complicated by a delay in performing a doppler ultrasound to rule out deep vein thrombosis (DVT), which was ordered by the hospice agency but not completed in a timely manner due to issues with the sonogram provider. Interviews with facility staff and hospice personnel revealed a lack of communication and coordination during the resident's admission, as well as a failure to verify medication orders properly. The DON admitted to the oversight, and the facility acknowledged the error, which was compounded by the absence of a hospice nurse during the resident's admission. The resident's condition was eventually assessed, and a blood clot was confirmed, leading to an adjustment in the resident's medication regimen.
Failure to Notify Physician After Resident Fall
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to immediately notify a resident's physician following an unwitnessed fall, which was a violation of resident rights. The incident involved a female resident with severe cognitive impairment and a history of falls, who was found on the floor by a Certified Medication Aide (CMA). Despite the resident's high risk for falls and the presence of a fall protocol, the necessary assessments and notifications were not conducted promptly. The resident's medical records lacked documentation of the fall, pain assessment, or incident report on the day of the incident. Interviews with staff revealed a breakdown in communication and adherence to protocol. The CMA who found the resident on the floor did not follow the facility's fall protocol, which required a nurse to assess the resident before any movement. Instead, the CMA performed an unauthorized range of motion assessment and moved the resident without notifying a nurse or the Director of Nursing (DON). The Licensed Vocational Nurse (LVN) on duty was preoccupied with a new admission and did not recall being informed of the fall, leading to further delays in appropriate medical evaluation and notification. The facility's Director of Nursing and other supervisory staff were unaware of the incident until much later, indicating a significant lapse in communication and protocol adherence. The resident was eventually sent to the emergency room the following day after showing signs of decline, where a hip fracture was diagnosed. The failure to follow established procedures for fall incidents placed the resident at risk of further harm and delayed necessary medical intervention.
Failure to Ensure Qualified Staff Assessment After Resident Fall
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to ensure that services provided or arranged by the facility, as outlined by the comprehensive care plan, were delivered by qualified persons in accordance with each resident's written plan of care. Specifically, the facility did not ensure that a qualified staff member assessed a resident after an unwitnessed fall. On the day of the incident, a Certified Medication Aide (CMA) conducted a range of motion assessment and transferred the resident from the floor to a wheelchair without informing administrative staff or ensuring a qualified nurse performed the necessary assessments. The resident involved was an elderly female with a history of Alzheimer's disease, impaired cognitive function, and a high risk for falls due to unsteady balance and poor safety awareness. On the day of the incident, there were no nursing note entries, pain assessments, or incident reports documented for the resident. The following day, the resident's condition declined, leading to her being sent to the emergency room, where she was diagnosed with a minimally displaced left subcapital femoral neck fracture. Interviews with staff revealed a lack of adherence to the facility's fall protocol. The CMA admitted to performing actions outside her scope of practice and failing to report the incident to the appropriate personnel. Other staff members, including CNAs and LVNs, confirmed that only nurses were authorized to perform assessments and that the incident was not properly communicated to the Director of Nursing (DON) or the Administrator. The failure to follow protocol and ensure proper assessment by qualified staff placed residents at risk for not receiving appropriate care and treatment.
Failure to Follow Fall Protocol and Ensure Proper Assessment
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to ensure that a resident received treatment and care in accordance with professional standards of practice, the comprehensive person-centered care plan, and the resident's choices. This deficiency was identified when a resident, who had a history of Alzheimer's disease, impaired cognitive function, and was at high risk for falls, was found on the floor by a CMA. The resident was not properly assessed or monitored after the incident, and there was no documentation of a pain assessment or incident report on the day of the fall. The incident occurred when the CMA found the resident on the floor and attempted to perform range of motion exercises and transfer the resident back to her wheelchair without notifying a nurse or following the facility's fall protocol. The CMA did not report the incident to the DON or Administrator, and the resident was not assessed by a licensed nurse until the following day when she was transferred to the hospital. Interviews with staff revealed a lack of communication and adherence to protocol, as the incident was not properly reported or documented. The facility's failure to follow proper procedures and ensure that only qualified staff performed assessments and interventions led to an Immediate Jeopardy situation. The lack of documentation and communication among staff members contributed to the deficiency, as the resident's condition was not adequately monitored or addressed following the fall.
Latest citations in Texas
A resident with severe dementia, mobility deficits, and dependence for transfers was provided bed rails without a documented entrapment risk assessment, physician order, or inclusion of bed rail use in the care plan, despite a facility policy requiring alternatives, IDT review, informed consent, and proper installation. Maintenance installed 1/3 bed rails on verbal request from nursing, believing the clinical steps had been completed, and the resident later was found partially out of bed with her head pinned between the rail and a low air loss mattress, unresponsive, and subsequently pronounced deceased. The medical examiner noted neck abrasions, bruising, and muscle hemorrhage consistent with entrapment between the mattress and bed rail and indicated the likely cause of death as strangulation on the rails or asphyxiation on the mattress, and the deficiency was cited as past Immediate Jeopardy.
A resident with severe cognitive impairment and multiple pressure injuries received twice-daily wound care without a corresponding pain care plan or documented pain assessments, despite having a PRN acetaminophen order. During an observed wound care attempt, the resident winced, cried out, and showed facial expressions consistent with pain when repositioned, while staff were unsure of her primary language, whether she had been assessed or medicated for pain, or even what pain medications were ordered. CNAs and the treatment nurse noted foul odor and colored drainage from the wounds and that the resident felt warm, but the LVN initially reported no indication of pain or need for vital signs and only checked a temperature after surveyor prompting, without performing a clear pain assessment. The wound care NP later reported the resident had increased necrotic tissue, odor, and frequent combative behavior during prior treatments that had not been considered as possible pain responses, and the resident’s representative stated they were unaware of wound odor, infection concerns, or antibiotic orders and believed the resident was receiving pain medication while video showed wound care being attempted without it.
Surveyors found three mechanical lifts repeatedly parked unlocked and unsecured in a hallway adjacent to the 300 Hall, where they were stored and charged when not in use. An RN and a CNA assigned to the hall both stated they were unaware the lifts were unsecured, despite prior in‑service training on lift safety and storage, and each could not recall when that training last occurred. The DON confirmed that all lifts were expected to be locked when not in use, acknowledged unawareness of the unsecured lifts over several days, and stated that while staff had been educated on lift safety, there was no facility policy addressing accidents and hazards related to mechanical lift safety and storage, and the existing mechanical lift policy lacked such content.
Surveyors found multiple food safety and storage deficiencies in the kitchen, including an unsealed bag of meat, sauce containers with dried drippings on the handle and rim, a container of overripe bananas with black peels, and uncovered whole eggs in an unlabeled, undated bowl. Temperature logs for reach-in refrigerators and a freezer were missing required PM shift temperature checks and staff signatures. In interviews, dietary staff, the Dietary Manager, and the Administrator confirmed that these conditions did not follow facility policies requiring open food to be securely covered, labeled, dated, properly cleaned, and monitored with completed temperature logs.
A resident with lymphedema and multiple comorbidities had physician orders for bilateral lower extremity ace wraps each morning with removal in the evening, along with edema checks every shift. On the survey day, the resident was observed in a wheelchair without leg wraps, while the MAR showed the morning treatment as completed. The resident reported his legs were supposed to be wrapped daily and that they had not been wrapped for about a week, and he described inconsistent staff response to his call light. The charge nurse admitted it was not normal practice to document treatment before completion and stated the resident usually received wraps after a shower, which had not yet occurred. CNAs gave conflicting accounts about how consistently the wraps were applied, and leadership confirmed expectations that treatments be performed per orders and documented only after completion, in line with the facility’s documentation policy prohibiting false entries.
Surveyors found that the facility failed to provide pressure ulcer care consistent with professional standards for three residents. One resident with hemiplegia and vascular dementia had a sacral wound that was omitted from the care plan and repeatedly left off weekly skin assessments, while heel wounds were documented without consistent measurements or staging and ordered treatments were not always recorded as given. A second resident with multiple comorbidities developed a sacral wound that progressed from MASD to an unstageable and then Stage 4 pressure injury with surgical debridement, yet the care plan was not updated to reflect the active pressure ulcer and specific interventions, and weekly skin assessments often lacked complete staging and measurements. A third resident with dementia and incontinence had an unstageable sacral ulcer and MASD, but weekly skin assessments were inconsistent, some ordered wound treatments and topical medications were not documented on the TAR, and nursing notes did not show that care was provided on those dates. Staff interviews revealed that the treatment nurse handled nearly all weekly skin assessments and wound care documentation, relied on the DON or wound physician for staging and measurements, and that facility policies requiring complete wound assessment and documentation were not consistently followed.
The facility failed to ensure call lights were accessible for four residents who were identified as fall risks and required assistance with ADLs or had significant mobility or cognitive impairments. Observations found residents lying in bed with call lights placed at the head of the bed, on the floor, on a roommate’s bed, or on a nightstand, all out of reach, despite care plan interventions requiring call lights to be kept within reach. A CNA, an LVN, and the DON each confirmed that all staff are responsible for keeping call bells within residents’ reach and acknowledged that inaccessible call bells could lead to accidents, falls, avoidable injuries, delayed care, and unmet needs, contrary to the facility’s written call light policy.
Surveyors found that multiple resident rooms and two halls were not maintained in a clean and sanitary condition. Bathrooms in several rooms had brown or gray stains in corners and around toilets, and some showers and room floors had dark or built-up dirt along edges, near closets, and by beds and walls. Air conditioning vents and filters in several rooms were observed with black grime or thick dust. Handrails on two halls had debris, including tissue with a red-brown substance, candy wrappers, gum, plastic, and paper wedged between the rails. Sharps containers in several rooms had used gloves and trash placed on top. The Administrator and housekeeping staff confirmed that housekeeping was responsible for cleaning rooms, bathrooms, floors, handrails, and air conditioning units, and staff acknowledged that the observed conditions were a health hazard and could cause infection.
The facility failed to follow its own infection control practices and physician orders for three residents requiring respiratory care. A resident with COPD had a nasal cannula and nebulizer mask connected to equipment that were not bagged or dated when not in use, despite orders for weekly changes. Another resident with asthma had an unbagged, undated nasal cannula and an oxygen humidifier bottle that was partially full, cracked, and dated from a prior week. A third resident with COPD had both nasal cannula and nebulizer mask unbagged and undated, despite orders for weekly equipment changes and monitoring of pulse, O2 sat, treatment time, and lung sounds. Staff, including a CNA, an LVN, and the DON, acknowledged that equipment should always be bagged, dated, and changed per schedule to prevent infection, consistent with the facility’s infection prevention and control policy.
Surveyors found that staff failed to administer multiple residents’ scheduled medications within the facility’s one-hour administration window, despite active orders for numerous drugs treating conditions such as DM, HTN, CHF, dementia, seizures, and hypothyroidism. During a morning med pass, a med tech had not completed 8:00 a.m. and 9:00 a.m. medications by late morning, and staff interviews confirmed that medications were required to be given within a defined time range. In addition, staff did not consistently check BP before dispensing medications with BP parameters, did not keep a milk-based Med Pass nutritional supplement refrigerated or on ice as required by manufacturer directions and facility protocol, and failed to date most insulin vials when opened, contrary to facility policy. These actions and inactions showed that pharmaceutical services, including accurate dispensing, administration, and storage of medications and biologicals, were not provided as required for the residents reviewed.
Failure to Assess, Order, and Care Plan Bed Rail Use Resulting in Fatal Entrapment
Penalty
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to follow its own policy and regulatory requirements for the assessment, ordering, care planning, and safe use of bed rails for a cognitively impaired resident. The resident was an elderly female with severe dementia, repeated falls, a fractured neck of the left femur, cognitive communication deficit, and a need for assistance with personal care. Her admission MDS showed a BIMS score of 03, indicating severe cognitive impairment, and documented that she required substantial staff assistance with bed mobility and was completely dependent on staff for transfers from bed to chair. Despite these needs, her care plan addressed ADL self-care performance deficits related to dementia and included interventions for bed mobility requiring one staff member to assist with repositioning, but it did not mention bed rails or any risk of entrapment. The facility obtained a bed rail consent form signed by the resident’s family member, which listed multiple potential dangers of bed rail use, including suffocation and various forms of entrapment that could cause injury or death. However, from the time of admission through the date of the incident, there was no documented bed rail safety or entrapment risk assessment for this resident, no physician order for bed rails, and no inclusion of bed rail use in the resident’s care plan. Maintenance staff reported that a charge nurse verbally requested installation of bed rails on the resident’s bed, and he believed the usual clinical steps—assessment, IDT review, consent, and physician order—had already been completed, but he had no documentation of when the rails were installed. The DON later confirmed that, for this resident, the required risk of entrapment assessment, physician order, and care plan focus for bed rails were not completed, and alternatives to bed rails were not attempted prior to installation, contrary to facility policy. On the night of the incident, a CNA observed the resident resting calmly around 2:00 a.m. During a subsequent round close to 5:00 a.m., the CNA found the resident partially out of bed with her head pinned between the assist bar/bed rail and the mattress, and notified the LVN. The LVN’s written statement described finding the resident seated on the floor on the right side of the bed, off the mattress, with her head resting between the side rail and the mattress, unresponsive. CPR was initiated and EMS was called, but the resident was later pronounced deceased. The county medical examiner reported that the resident had bruising and abrasions around the neck and jawline and hemorrhaging in the neck muscles, injuries consistent with being trapped between the mattress and bed rails, and indicated that the likely cause of death would be strangulation on the bed rails or asphyxiation on the mattress. Subsequent observation of the bed showed 1/3 bed rails of the same make and model as the bed frame and a low air loss mattress; while the rails were not loose and there was little space when the mattress was fully inflated, the air mattress could be compressed enough to create significant space between the mattress and rails. The facility’s failure to conduct a bed rail entrapment risk assessment, obtain a physician order, and incorporate bed rail use into the care plan prior to installation led to the resident’s entrapment and death, and constituted noncompliance identified as past Immediate Jeopardy. The facility’s written bed rail policy required that appropriate alternatives be attempted before installing bed rails, that the IDT assess each resident for entrapment risk, that risks and benefits be reviewed with the resident or representative, that informed consent be obtained prior to installation, and that manufacturer instructions and compatibility of bed, mattress, and rails be verified. It also required updating the care plan to reflect the need or choice for bed rails. In this case, staff interviews and record review showed that these steps were not followed for the resident involved. The DON acknowledged that the process did not occur as required, that the IDT did not meet to assess the resident for entrapment risk, and that the bed rails were installed based on the responsible party’s request without the mandated clinical review and documentation. This sequence of omissions and deviations from policy directly preceded the resident’s fatal entrapment between the bed rail and mattress.
Removal Plan
- Notify Medical Director
- Notify Ombudsman
- Conduct ad hoc QAPI
- DON to provide education to trainers regarding abuse and neglect
- Review admissions processes regarding bed rails and complete in-service with DON, ED, and IDT
- Provide in-service to all nurses involved with admissions process regarding bed rails
- Audit bed rails currently in use
- Inspect bed rails currently in use
- Verify consent on file for all bed rails in use
- Verify order and care plan for all bed rails
- Complete bed rail safety evaluation for all residents with bed rails
- Audit low air loss mattresses currently in use
- Verify order and care plan for all low air loss mattresses in use
- Complete fall risk assessment for all residents with low air loss mattress
- Provide staff education regarding use of enabler/bed rail
- Provide staff education regarding false safety
- Provide staff education regarding low air loss mattress
- Audit admissions for completion
- Audit low air loss mattresses and bedside rails
- Conduct ongoing monitoring for improvement to be reviewed at QAPI
Failure to Assess and Manage Pain During Wound Care for a Nonverbal Resident
Penalty
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide safe, appropriate pain management consistent with professional standards of practice and the resident’s needs during wound care. A female resident with severe cognitive impairment (BIMS score of 00) was admitted with multiple pressure-related skin conditions, including a left heel deep tissue injury (DTI), right heel DTI, an unstageable sacral pressure injury, a left heel ulcer, a right bunion DTI, and other bruising/discoloration. Her MDS Care Area Assessment did not trigger for pain and no care planning decision for pain was documented. The resident’s care plan contained detailed entries for her multiple wounds but did not include any care plan for pain, despite the presence of significant pressure injuries and ongoing wound care orders. Record review showed the resident had an active PRN order for acetaminophen 500 mg every 6 hours as needed for pain and an order for Doxycycline for the sacral wound, as well as twice-daily wound care orders for the unstageable sacral pressure injury. The MAR for the month showed that no acetaminophen had been administered since early in the month, even though wound care was being performed twice daily. During an observed attempt to perform wound care, the resident was dependent for mobility and required staff to roll and reposition her. When staff attempted to roll her for treatment, she winced, cried out "Oh my God" in Spanish, and displayed furrowed eyebrows and facial expressions consistent with pain. CNAs assisting with care noted that she appeared to be lying on the wound, that her wounds often drained, and that there was a foul odor and visible brownish-green drainage on her brief and positioning towels. Despite these signs, the treatment nurse could not confirm whether the resident had been assessed for pain or medicated prior to the procedure and was unsure of the resident’s primary language. During this same encounter, the resident was noted by the surveyor and CNAs to feel warm to the touch, and her wounds and dressings showed green, brown, or red drainage. The treatment nurse and CNAs acknowledged the resident felt warm, but the charge nurse (LVN) initially stated there was no indication the resident was in pain or needed vital signs assessed and only checked the resident’s temperature after being prompted by the surveyor. The LVN reported a normal temperature using a contactless thermometer, was unsure if the resident had any pain medication orders, and did not initially perform a direct pain assessment. Subsequent interviews revealed that the wound care NP had observed increased necrotic tissue and odor in the sacral wound the prior week and that the resident had been frequently combative, refusing wound care by kicking and biting, but this behavior had not been considered as a possible reaction to pain. CNAs later described the resident’s facial expressions and reactions during repositioning as indicating pain, while the LVN reported feeling pressured and nervous during the surveyor’s questioning and could not clearly describe having assessed the resident for pain during her shift. The resident’s responsible party stated they had not been informed of wound odor, infection concerns, or antibiotic orders and believed the resident was receiving pain and fever medications, later expressing shock upon reviewing video that showed wound care being attempted without medication. The facility’s own pain assessment and management policy stated that residents should be assessed for pain at admission and ongoing, monitored for pain with changes in condition, and that procedures such as moving or wound care can cause pain. It also directed that pain management interventions be consistent with the resident’s goals and documented in the care plan, and that underlying causes of pain, including skin/wound conditions like pressure ulcers, be addressed. In this case, the resident with multiple pressure injuries and ongoing wound care had no pain care plan, no documented pain assessment using appropriate tools for severe dementia, and no administration of ordered PRN pain medication in the weeks preceding the observed event, despite clear non-verbal signs of pain during wound care attempts. These actions and omissions led surveyors to determine that the facility failed to ensure pain was assessed and treated prior to wound care, resulting in the resident crying out and exhibiting pain behaviors when touched or moved.
Removal Plan
- Amend treatment orders to require pain evaluation prior to treatments and medication if indicated upon re-admission.
- Provide additional 1:1 education to CNA A, CNA B, LVN A, and the facility treatment nurse specific to issues identified in the preliminary fact analysis.
- Nursing leadership (DON/designees) to conduct facility rounds on all residents to ensure no unreported or undocumented changes in pain levels; audit all wound care orders to ensure pain management orders are present as indicated.
- Complete house-wide pain assessments; communicate any reported pain to the charge nurse for medication administration if indicated and complete follow-up assessment to ensure effectiveness.
- Re-educate licensed nurses on change in condition, pain assessment and management, administering pain medications, and the pain-clinical protocol (including identifying situations where increased pain may be anticipated such as wound care, ambulation, repositioning, and reviewing the critical element pathway for pain recognition and management).
- Re-educate all non-licensed nursing staff on recognizing change in condition/status including changes in pain levels and proper reporting using STOP AND WATCH Alert in PCC/point-of-care documentation and/or direct communication to the charge nurse; re-educate staff not working prior to their next scheduled shift.
- Educate the Facility Administrator and DON by the Divisional President of Operations on standards of care, pain management, and quality oversight.
- Validate staff education via completion of a quiz and acknowledgement covering recognition of changes in condition, proper notification procedures, and pain assessment and management.
- Review and validate the pain assessment and management policy to ensure alignment with regulatory requirements (no changes required).
- Implement monitoring: change in condition/pain assessment audits (review 24-hour summary report and nurse progress notes; ensure changes are reported to the provider and documented; ensure pain assessments are completed prior to treatments); review audit results in IDT/QAPI meetings and address issues immediately, including provider communication.
Unsecured Mechanical Lifts Left Unlocked in Resident Hallway
Penalty
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to keep the environment as free of accident hazards as possible in the hallway adjacent to the 300 Hall, specifically related to unsecured mechanical lifts. Surveyors repeatedly observed three mechanical lifts parked in this hallway that were unlocked and unsecured on multiple occasions over three consecutive days at various times. These observations showed that the lifts remained in an unsecured state while not in use, in an area used for storing and charging them. During interviews, an RN assigned to the 300 Hall stated she was unaware that the three mechanical lifts parked in the adjacent hallway were unlocked and unsecured, despite being stationed at the nearby nurses’ station. She reported having received in‑service training on mechanical lift safety and storage but could not recall when the training occurred. The RN acknowledged that mechanical lifts were supposed to be locked when not in use and confirmed that the three lifts observed were the only ones she used for residents and that they were stored in that hallway to be charged when not in use. She also stated that she typically did not check the parked lifts to verify they were locked and secured. A CNA assigned to the same hall similarly reported being unaware that the three mechanical lifts were unlocked and unsecured, despite also having received in‑service training on mechanical lift safety and storage and being unable to recall when that training last occurred. The DON stated she was unaware that the three lifts had been left unlocked and unsecured over the three days of observation and confirmed her expectation that all mechanical lifts be locked when not in use. The DON stated that all staff had been educated on proper mechanical lift usage and safety but could not recall when the last in‑service training occurred. The DON and Administrator both reported that the facility did not have a policy addressing accidents and hazards related to mechanical lift safety and storage, and the existing “Total Mechanical Lift” policy did not contain information on accidents and hazards related to lift safety and storage.
Food Storage, Labeling, and Temperature Monitoring Deficiencies in Kitchen
Penalty
Summary
Surveyors identified a deficiency in the facility’s food storage and handling practices in the main kitchen. During an observation of the walk-in refrigerator, they found a zip-top bag containing meat slices that was not fully sealed and exposed to air. They also observed one gallon container of sauce with black drippings on the handle and one jar of sauce with yellow, dried drippings around the rim. A container held approximately ten overripe whole bananas with black peels, and three whole eggs were left uncovered and exposed to air in an unlabeled and undated bowl. Additionally, temperature logs for two reach-in refrigerators and one reach-in freezer were missing the PM shift temperature checks and signatures for a specific date. In interviews, dietary staff, the Dietary Manager, and the Administrator confirmed that these conditions were inconsistent with facility policies and expected practices. Dietary staff stated that temperature logs were to be completed at the start and end of each shift by cooks and dietary aides, and that the Dietary Manager was responsible for ensuring completion. They explained that eggs should be returned to their original container or stored sealed, labeled, and dated; overripe bananas should be discarded; zip-top bags should be fully sealed; and jars and gallon containers should be wiped down after each use. The Dietary Manager and Administrator reiterated that all open food must be securely covered, labeled, and dated, and that fruits and vegetables showing visible damage or rot should be discarded, consistent with written facility policies on food storage and dietary food service personnel responsibilities.
Failure to Follow Physician Orders for Lymphedema Leg Wraps and Accurate Documentation
Penalty
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide treatment and care in accordance with physician orders and professional standards of practice for one resident with lymphedema. The resident was an adult male with multiple diagnoses including cardiac arrhythmia, musculoskeletal symptoms, osteitis deformans of multiple sites, eye and adnexa disorder, lymphedema, major depressive disorder, prostate disorder, chronic pain, hypokalemia, COPD, muscle weakness, lack of coordination, epilepsy with complex partial seizures, unsteadiness on feet, and other gait and mobility abnormalities. His Quarterly MDS showed a BIMS score of 15, indicating intact cognition, and he was dependent for toileting hygiene, showering/bathing, and personal hygiene. Physician orders on the March MAR included ace wraps to both lower extremities every morning and removal every evening, along with edema checks every shift. On the survey date, record review of the March MAR showed that the charge nurse had documented completion of the resident’s morning leg wrap treatment, but when the surveyor reviewed the resident at 11:21 a.m., he was observed sitting in his wheelchair with his legs not wrapped. At 11:50 a.m., the MAR still reflected that the treatment was completed, despite the wraps not being in place. The resident reported he had severe leg swelling due to lymphedema and stated his legs were supposed to be wrapped daily, but the last time they had been wrapped was about a week prior. He stated that whether his call light requests for treatment were answered depended on who responded, and that staff sometimes did not return to complete his care, which made him feel bad. In interviews, Charge Nurse A acknowledged that it was not normal nursing practice to document treatment before completion and stated that the resident normally received leg wraps after his shower, but that morning the resident had not yet had a shower. CNAs provided differing accounts: one CNA stated the wraps were always on during bed baths but did not bathe the resident that day; another CNA stated that sometimes the resident’s legs were wrapped and sometimes not, that his legs were not wrapped that day, and that she had given him a bed bath that morning; a third CNA stated she had never seen his legs unwrapped. The NP explained that the purpose of the wraps was to enhance circulation due to lymphedema. The DON confirmed the resident had bilateral leg wrap orders in the morning and removal in the evening, and that she was informed around midday that his legs were not wrapped. The Administrator stated she knew the resident’s legs were wrapped but did not know why, and both the DON and Administrator stated that documentation of treatment should occur after the treatment is performed, consistent with the facility’s documentation policy, which prohibits false information in the medical record.
Failure to Accurately Assess, Care Plan, and Treat Pressure Ulcers for Multiple Residents
Penalty
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide pressure ulcer care consistent with professional standards, including accurate assessment, staging, measurement, care planning, and implementation of ordered treatments for multiple residents with pressure injuries. For one resident with hemiplegia, vascular dementia, incontinence, low body weight, and an admission Braden score indicating risk, the facility did not consistently identify and document all existing wounds. Her care plan listed only a left heel pressure wound and omitted a sacral wound. Weekly skin assessments from late January through March repeatedly failed to document the sacral wound after its initial identification, and heel wounds were inconsistently documented without required measurements or staging. On several dates, the weekly skin assessment was left blank or lacked measurements, despite physician documentation that the left heel wound progressed from Stage 3 to Stage 4 with increasing size. The treatment administration record (TAR) also showed missing documentation of ordered wound treatments to the sacrum and left heel on multiple dates, with no corresponding nursing notes indicating that care was provided. A second resident with hemiplegia, vascular dementia, diabetes, malnutrition, peripheral vascular disease, incontinence, and significant weight loss was identified as at risk for pressure ulcers but initially had no documented pressure wounds. Her care plan, last updated the previous year, addressed only potential for pressure ulcer development and other skin integrity risks, and did not reflect a current sacral pressure wound. However, physician orders and TAR entries showed daily treatment to a sacral wound, and weekly skin assessments documented a sacral wound beginning in mid-February. These assessments frequently lacked staging and, at times, lacked complete measurements. Over several weeks, documentation showed the sacral wound increasing in size and evolving from MASD to an unstageable wound and then to a Stage 4 pressure injury requiring surgical debridement of devitalized tissue, including subcutaneous tissue, muscle fascia, and tendon. Despite this progression and ongoing wound physician involvement, the resident’s care plan was not updated to reflect the current pressure injury and specific wound care interventions. A third resident with dementia, Alzheimer’s disease, muscle weakness, incontinence, and an initially non-risk Braden score that later declined to moderate risk had an unstageable sacral pressure ulcer present on admission and MASD. Her care plan included potential for pressure ulcer development, an unstageable sacral pressure ulcer related to immobility, and a wound infection requiring oral antibiotics. Physician orders directed weekly skin assessments and specific daily and evening wound treatments to the sacral area. However, the March TAR showed multiple dates where ordered sacral wound treatments and topical medication for left upper buttock redness were not documented as given, and nursing progress notes did not show that wound care was provided on those dates. Weekly skin assessments for this resident were inconsistent, with several assessments in early January documented as refused or limited, alternating between noting arm discoloration and no skin issues, and later assessments intermittently omitting the sacral wound or lacking measurements and staging. Wound physician notes documented an unstageable sacral pressure injury with rapid clinical decline and later a Stage 3 pressure injury that had increased in size, but these changes were not consistently mirrored in the facility’s weekly skin assessment documentation. Interviews with nursing staff and leadership further described systemic issues contributing to the deficiency. The treatment nurse stated she could not stage wounds and relied on the DON or wound physician for staging, and that she was responsible for updating care plans when new pressure injuries were identified, though she was unsure of the required timeframe. She also reported that she performed nearly all weekly skin assessments for approximately 96 residents Monday through Thursday, with no assessments scheduled on Fridays unless there was a new admission, and that wound measurements were typically taken only when the wound physician visited, after which she transferred his measurements into the weekly skin assessments. The DON and ADON indicated that the treatment nurse was responsible for all wound care planning, weekly skin assessments, and ensuring documentation, and acknowledged that missing or inconsistent wound measurements and documentation on weekly skin assessments would prevent the facility from determining whether wounds were improving or worsening. Facility policies required full assessment and documentation of pressure ulcers, including location, stage, length, width, depth, exudate, and necrotic tissue, as well as complete wound care documentation, but the records for these three residents showed repeated omissions and inconsistencies in assessment, staging, measurement, care planning, and documentation of ordered treatments.
Failure to Ensure Accessible Call Lights for Multiple Residents
Penalty
Summary
Surveyors identified a deficiency in the facility’s failure to reasonably accommodate resident needs and preferences by not ensuring that call lights were accessible to four residents reviewed. For one male resident with a skull fracture, a baseline MDS showing he was a fall risk and unable to complete the BIMS interview, and a care plan indicating he required assistance with ADLs, observation showed he was lying in bed with his call light positioned at the head of the bed, out of his reach. A second male resident, with diagnoses including need for assistance with personal care, stroke, and dysphagia, and a quarterly MDS indicating he was unable to complete the BIMS interview, had a care plan intervention specifying that his call light should be within reach; however, observation found him lying in bed with his call light on the floor, out of reach. A third resident, a female with lack of coordination, unsteadiness on her feet, repeated falls, and severe cognitive impairment (BIMS score of 1), had a care plan intervention to ensure her call light was within reach, yet she was observed lying in bed with her call light placed on her roommate’s bed. A fourth male resident with right-sided paralysis, intact cognition (BIMS 14), and a care plan identifying him as a fall risk with an intervention to keep his call light within reach, was observed lying in bed with his call light on the nightstand, out of reach. During interviews, a CNA, an LVN, and the DON each stated that call bells should always be within residents’ reach and that all staff are responsible for ensuring this, and acknowledged that lack of accessible call bells could result in accidents, falls, avoidable injuries, delayed care, and unmet needs. The facility’s written policy on call lights required staff to place the call device within the resident’s reach before leaving the room.
Failure to Maintain Clean Resident Rooms and Hallway Handrails
Penalty
Summary
Surveyors identified a deficiency in the facility’s failure to provide a safe, clean, comfortable, and homelike environment, as required by the facility’s Resident Rights policy. During observations on the 300 and 400 halls, surveyors noted that handrails contained debris, including a piece of tissue with a red and brownish substance on the 300 hall and candy wrappers, gum, clear plastic materials, and large pieces of paper wedged between the rails on the 400 hall. Multiple resident rooms on these halls were found with unclean and unsanitary conditions. Several bathrooms had brownish or grayish stains in the corners of the floors and around toilets, as well as dark stains along floor edges, in corners, and in showers. Room floors showed built-up dirt near closet doors, door frames, and along floor edges, with brownish or dark stains near beds and walls. Additional observations revealed that air conditioning unit vents and filters in several rooms had black grime or thick dust accumulation. In multiple rooms, sharps containers used for needle disposal had used, dirty or disposable gloves and pieces of trash placed on top of them. During interviews, the Administrator stated that housekeeping services were provided seven days a week, with cleaning in the morning and evening, and that housekeeping was expected to thoroughly clean resident rooms and facility areas. A housekeeper assigned to the 300 and 400 halls confirmed responsibility for cleaning entire rooms, bathrooms, floors, and wiping down handrails, stating that handrails were wiped at least once a week and acknowledging that the observed conditions were a health hazard. The Housekeeping Supervisor confirmed that housekeeping and floor technicians were responsible for cleaning hallways, floors, handrails, entire rooms, bathrooms, and air conditioning units, and acknowledged that not thoroughly cleaning rooms and handrails could cause an infection.
Improper Storage and Maintenance of Oxygen and Nebulizer Equipment
Penalty
Summary
Surveyors identified that the facility failed to provide respiratory care consistent with professional standards, physician orders, and the infection prevention and control program for three residents receiving oxygen and nebulizer treatments. For a male resident with COPD, record review showed physician orders to change tubing, clean filters, and change the O2 water bottle and nebulizer kit weekly on night shift every Saturday. However, observation revealed that his nasal cannula connected to the oxygen concentrator and his nebulizer mask connected to the nebulizer machine were not bagged or labeled with a date when not in use. For a female resident with asthma, physician orders directed weekly changes of tubing, filter cleaning, and O2 water bottle changes, but observation showed her nasal cannula connected to the oxygen concentrator was not bagged or labeled, and an oxygen humidifier bottle left on the nightstand was only one-quarter full, cracked, and dated from an earlier date. A female resident with COPD had physician orders to change tubing, clean filters, and change the O2 water bottle and nebulizer kit weekly, as well as orders to obtain and record pulse, O2 saturation, treatment minutes, and lung sounds in relation to nebulizer treatments. Observation found that her nasal cannula connected to the oxygen concentrator and nebulizer mask connected to the nebulizer machine were not bagged or labeled with a date when not in use. Staff interviews with a CNA, an LVN, and the DON confirmed that facility practice and expectations were for oxygen tubing and nebulizer masks to be bagged and dated when not in use, with bags changed weekly or as needed, and for humidifier bottles to be changed regularly. The DON stated that failure to follow these practices could be an infection control issue leading to serious health consequences. The facility’s written Infection Prevention and Control Program policy emphasized decreasing infection risk, recognizing infection control practices during care, and ensuring compliance with infection control regulations, which was not followed in these observed instances.
Medication Administration, Monitoring, and Storage Failures During Med Pass
Penalty
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide pharmaceutical services that ensured accurate acquiring, receiving, dispensing, and administering of medications and biologicals for all 10 residents reviewed for pharmacy services. Record reviews showed that multiple residents had active physician orders for medications to treat conditions such as Type 2 diabetes, dementia, end-stage renal disease, hypertension, heart failure, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, hypothyroidism, seizures, neuropathy, and pain. These medications included antihypertensives (such as amlodipine, hydralazine, metoprolol, benazepril, nifedipine), anticoagulants (Eliquis), antidiabetics (metformin, insulin), antipsychotics (olanzapine, quetiapine), anticonvulsants (levetiracetam), thyroid replacement (levothyroxine), heart failure medications (furosemide, carvedilol, isosorbide dinitrate), and others such as gabapentin, baclofen, galantamine, and lidocaine patches. During observation of a morning medication pass, surveyors noted that Med Tech F had not finished passing morning medications on two hallways between 10:15 a.m. and 11:14 a.m., even though those medications were scheduled for 8:00 a.m. and 9:00 a.m. This meant that residents’ medications were administered more than one hour after their scheduled administration times, contrary to the facility’s stated one-hour before or after administration window. Interviews with Med Tech F, LVN A, and the DON confirmed that facility practice and policy required medications to be given at the ordered times within that window to maintain effectiveness and comply with physician orders. The facility also failed to follow required procedures related to medication parameters and storage. Med Tech F and LVN A stated that medications with blood pressure check parameters required a blood pressure reading before dispensing the medication into a cup, but the report states the facility failed to check one resident’s blood pressure before dispensing medication. Additionally, observations and interviews revealed that the Med Pass liquid nutritional supplement, described as milk-based, was not kept refrigerated or on ice during medication administration, despite manufacturer directions and facility protocol requiring it to be refrigerated or kept on ice. Further, review of insulin storage on three halls showed that 12 of 14 insulin vials were not dated with the date of first use, even though LVN A, LVN B, and the DON stated that facility policy required insulin vials to be dated when opened and discarded after a specified period (generally 28–30 days). These failures placed residents at risk for receiving medications outside ordered time frames and using insulin vials without a known open date. Facility policy and procedure for medication administration (Policy Number 7C) required that medications be administered as prescribed by the resident’s physician, in accordance with written orders and the resident’s service plan, and that routine medications be administered per facility time ranges unless otherwise specified. The policy also required that medications be recorded on the MAR, that resident identification be verified prior to administration, and that medications be administered according to the dosage schedule on the MAR. Staff interviews confirmed awareness of these requirements, including the need to date insulin vials upon opening and to maintain proper storage conditions for nutritional supplements. Despite this, the observed late medication administration, failure to check blood pressure before dispensing certain medications, failure to keep Med Pass on ice or refrigerated, and failure to date insulin vials demonstrated noncompliance with the facility’s own medication administration and pharmaceutical services procedures for the residents reviewed.
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