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Ka Punawai Ola: 7% Weight Loss Undetected - HI

Healthcare Facility:

KAPOLEI, HI - Federal inspectors identified multiple care failures at Ka Punawai Ola during an April 2025 survey, including a significant undetected weight loss and gaps in nursing staff competency that placed residents at risk.

Ka Punawai Ola facility inspection

Unidentified 7% Weight Loss

Inspectors discovered a resident lost 11 pounds over approximately one month, dropping from 154 pounds on February 8 to 143.2 pounds by early March. This represented a 7.01% weight loss, exceeding the clinical threshold of 5% that triggers heightened monitoring and intervention.

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The facility's documentation system failed at multiple levels. Progress notes contained no mention of the significant weight loss. The resident's quarterly assessment, completed March 27 with data covering the period when the weight loss occurred, incorrectly indicated "No or Unknown" to weight loss of 5% or more in the last month.

During an interview on April 2, the facility's dietician confirmed awareness that the resident was losing weight but stated they had not calculated it as exceeding 5% in one month. The dietician acknowledged that proper identification would have prompted additional supplemental nutrition and closer monitoring.

Medical Significance of Rapid Weight Loss

Unintentional weight loss exceeding 5% in 30 days represents a critical clinical marker in nursing home residents. This rate of decline can indicate inadequate nutritional intake, undiagnosed medical conditions, swallowing difficulties, or depression.

Rapid weight loss in elderly residents increases vulnerability to pressure injuries, decreases immune function, and elevates fall risk due to muscle weakness. The 5% threshold exists specifically because intervention at this point can prevent progression to more serious malnutrition and associated complications.

When facilities fail to identify and document significant weight loss, residents miss the opportunity for timely medical evaluation to determine underlying causes. Appropriate interventions might include medication review, swallowing assessment, dental examination, evaluation for depression, or adjustment of dietary plans.

Nursing Competency Deficiencies

Inspectors also identified failures in nursing staff competency affecting two residents. Staff members did not report to the registered nurse when one resident refused repositioning, a critical communication failure for preventing pressure injuries in immobile residents.

In a separate incident, facility staff administered a higher dose of pain medication than the pain level reported by the resident warranted. Pain management protocols typically match medication dosing to resident-reported pain levels using standardized scales.

These competency gaps indicate insufficient training or supervision in fundamental nursing practices. Repositioning refusals require nursing judgment to assess underlying reasons and determine alternative strategies. Pain medication administration demands accurate assessment and appropriate dose selection to avoid both under-treatment and over-medication risks.

Assessment and Documentation Standards

Federal regulations require nursing homes to conduct comprehensive assessments that accurately reflect each resident's condition. The Minimum Data Set assessment serves as the foundation for care planning and must capture clinically significant changes.

Weight monitoring protocols exist to catch early signs of decline. Facilities should have systems ensuring that monthly weights are reviewed, percentage changes calculated, and significant losses flagged for clinical team review.

The failure in this case was not simply mathematical error but a systemic breakdown in the assessment process. Multiple staff members handled the resident's care without recognizing or escalating the weight trend. The documentation system failed to prompt appropriate clinical response.

Facility Response

Ka Punawai Ola received citations for failure to ensure accurate assessments and failure to provide competent nursing services. The facility must submit a plan of correction detailing how it will prevent similar occurrences.

The inspection was completed April 3, 2025. Violations were classified as minimal harm or potential for actual harm, affecting few residents in the sampled population.

Federal regulations require nursing homes to maintain systems ensuring staff competencies match resident needs and that assessments accurately capture clinical changes requiring intervention.

Full Inspection Report

The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Ka Punawai Ola from 2025-04-03 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.

Additional Resources

🏥 Editorial Standards & Professional Oversight

Data Source: This report is based on official federal inspection data from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS).

Editorial Process: Content generated using AI (Claude) to synthesize complex regulatory data, then reviewed and verified for accuracy by our editorial team.

Professional Review: All content undergoes standards and compliance oversight by Christopher F. Nesbitt, Sr., NH EMT & BU-trained Paralegal, through Twin Digital Media's regulatory data auditing protocols.

Medical Perspective: As emergency medical professionals, we understand how nursing home violations can escalate to health emergencies requiring ambulance transport. This analysis contextualizes regulatory findings within real-world patient safety implications.

Last verified: February 4, 2026 | Learn more about our methodology

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