Sunday, August 18, 2013

Failure to Monitor Bowel Movements in Nursing Home Patients Can Lead to Impacted Bowels


In addition to monitoring food and liquid intake of nursing home patients, the staff needs to pay attention to the elimination of the wastes. When urine and feces are not produced on a regular basis, the nursing home staff must bring these problems to the attention of physicians.

One of the more obvious cases of nursing home neglect my office is working on involves a patient who went at least 10 days without a bowel movement. Shift after shift of nursing home staff tended to our client-- yet no one cared enough to look at his medical chart to see when the last bowel movement occurred. It was not until the man was taken to a local hospital, was it determined that the man's bowel had become impacted with feces. Within 24-hours of his admission to the hospital, the man died from complications related to sepsis.

What is an impacted bowel?

An impacted bowel is the condition where feces are trapped in the lower part of the large intestine, causing a waste obstruction. The stool collects in the bowel and becomes hardened. This hard stool can irritate the rectum, resulting in the production of mucus and fluid which can leak, causing fecal incontinence.

One of the most common symptoms is lack of appetite, caused by pressure on the abdomen. Hemorrhoids (a mass of dilated veins in swollen tissue around the anus) are a common sign of impacted bowels because it is more difficult to rid your body of fecal matter. Other symptoms include: a constant feeling of fullness; diarrhea; hardened feces; cramping and pain; vomiting; constipation; bad breathe; and bloating. If left untreated, the waste obstruction can cause a rectal infection that can lead to sepsis or death.

The most common cause of impacted bowel symptoms is Crohn's disease. In a nursing home setting, causes of impacted bowel include: not drinking enough water; not eating a diet with adequate fiber; lack of activity; certain prescription medications and generally unhealthy diet with high fat and processed foods.

When timely identified, impacted bowels can be treated with a higher fiber diet, increased hydration, exercise, laxatives, enemas, suppositories, or manually removing the hardened feces.

Unfortunately, many nursing home patients are highly susceptible to impacted bowels due to a combination of inattentive staff and an unhealthy lifestyle. In order to minimize the chances of impacted bowels among patients, nursing homes should:

Provide the residents with proper nutrition (sufficient fiber, water, and healthy foods), the residents can suffer from painful constipation.

Provide as much physical activity as feasible for patients.

Monitor each patients bowel movements (time, quantity, consistency)

Pay special attention to patients complaining of stomach pain or cramping

Jonathan Rosenfeld is an attorney based in Chicago and handles elder abuse and neglect cases in the Midwest and across the country. Mr. Rosenfeld works on the following types of cases:

Bed Sores, Pressure Sores, Decubitus Ulcers
Falls
Dehydration / Malnutrition
Medication Errors
Impacted bowels
Sex Abuse
Medical Errors

Feel free to contact Jonathan for a free case evaluation.

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