Federal inspectors found that Lorien Health Systems failed to provide doctor-ordered treatments to residents with skin conditions and diabetic wounds, sometimes skipping care for weeks at a time. The violations affected at least two of the 24 residents reviewed during a September complaint investigation.

Resident 18 arrived at the facility in July 2024 from a hospital stay, already being treated for dermatitis. The condition causes swelling and irritation of the skin. Staff administered her treatments through July 30.
On July 26, a wound doctor examined the resident and diagnosed fungal dermatitis, ordering daily Clotrimazole treatment. Treatment records show the resident received the antifungal medication until July 30. Then it stopped.
The wound doctor saw the resident again on August 2 and August 9, documenting that the topical treatment being used was Clotrimazole. But treatment records reveal the resident received no Clotrimazole from July 31 through August 14.
During those two weeks without treatment, staff continued their weekly skin assessments. On August 14 at 4:18 PM, a nurse documented that the rash had resolved.
Two days later, on August 16, the wound doctor confirmed the fungal infection had cleared up.
The Director of Nursing acknowledged to inspectors that facility staff should have been administering the Clotrimazole treatment throughout the gap period from July 31 until August 14.
A second resident experienced even longer gaps in wound care. Resident 19 had been admitted in February 2024 with cerebrovascular disease, diabetes, and peripheral vascular disease.
By August, the resident had developed a wound on the right side of his foot. On August 2, the wound doctor assessed the injury as a right distal lateral foot wound caused by peripheral vascular disease.
The next day, the resident was hospitalized. He returned August 9 after having part of his fifth toe surgically removed. His diagnosis now included amputation of the distal aspect of the fifth metatarsal and diabetic right lateral foot wound.
Treatment records show systematic failures to provide the wound doctor's ordered care. The resident missed treatments from November 19 through November 25, 2024. He went without care again from December 21 through December 23.
In February 2025, another gap occurred from February 8 through February 12.
The Director of Nursing confirmed the inspector's findings about the missed treatments during a September 29 interview.
Both cases represent failures in a basic nursing home function: following physician orders for resident care. The facility's treatment administration records documented the gaps, creating a paper trail of when ordered care simply didn't happen.
For Resident 18, the two-week gap in antifungal treatment occurred while her condition was still active, according to the wound doctor's ongoing assessments. The medication was designed to clear the fungal infection, yet staff stopped administering it before the doctor had confirmed resolution.
Resident 19's situation was more complex, involving surgical complications and diabetic wound care. Peripheral vascular disease reduces blood flow to extremities, making wound healing difficult and increasing infection risk. Diabetic patients face additional challenges with wound healing due to poor circulation and reduced immune response.
The missed treatments occurred over a six-month period, suggesting systemic problems rather than isolated incidents. Each gap lasted multiple days, with the longest stretching nearly a week.
Treatment administration records serve as legal documentation that ordered care was provided. When gaps appear in these records, they indicate either that care wasn't given or that staff failed to document it properly. Both scenarios represent serious compliance failures.
The inspection was conducted in response to a complaint, though the specific nature of that complaint wasn't detailed in the report. Federal investigators reviewed medical records and interviewed nursing leadership to verify the treatment failures.
The facility serves residents with complex medical conditions requiring precise medication schedules and wound care protocols. When those protocols break down, residents face increased risk of complications, prolonged healing times, and potential hospitalization.
For Resident 18, the fungal dermatitis eventually resolved despite the treatment gap. For Resident 19, the impact of missed wound care on his healing process and overall condition remains unclear from the inspection record.
The Director of Nursing's acknowledgment of the violations suggests the facility recognizes the failures occurred. However, the inspection report doesn't detail what steps the facility planned to prevent similar treatment gaps in the future.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Lorien Health Systems - Columbia from 2025-09-29 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.
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