Failure to Ensure Accurate and Timely Medication Administration for Antihypertensives and Anticoagulant
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure residents were free from significant medication errors and to follow its own medication administration policies, particularly regarding timeliness, accuracy of orders, and documentation. One resident (R3), who has diagnoses including heart failure, hypertensive heart disease, type 2 diabetes mellitus, end stage renal disease with dependence on dialysis, and obesity, and who is cognitively intact with a BIMS score of 14, reported frequently receiving medications late and stated that on the day of observation the resident had not received any medications despite returning from dialysis at 10:30 AM. At 12:17 PM, an RN (V18) assessed R3’s blood pressure at 147/89 with a heart rate of 100 and acknowledged to the resident that the blood pressure was high because medications were being given late, specifically referencing the resident’s beta blocker and hypertension medications. At approximately 12:24 PM, V18 prepared R3’s morning medications, including nifedipine ER 60 mg, metoprolol tartrate 12.5 mg, gabapentin 100 mg, sevelamer 800 mg, and calcitriol 0.5 mcg, and stated these medications should have been given around 9:00 AM but were late. At 12:30 PM, V18 administered the medications to R3 and told the resident that medications were not supposed to be given outside the one-hour before/after window, describing this as a legal requirement, but proceeded with administration due to the elevated blood pressure. V18 further explained that the facility’s procedure is to check vital signs and then administer medications, and admitted that R3’s medications should have been given as soon as possible after returning from dialysis at 10:30 AM. V18 stated that the medications were not given timely because the nurse was responsible for 27–30 residents and acknowledged having given R3’s medications late on prior occasions, describing it as difficult to complete medication passes on time. The consultant pharmacist (V16) confirmed that nifedipine and metoprolol were being used to treat blood pressure and stated that if these medications are not received, blood pressure is expected to increase, emphasizing that nifedipine ER should be given at the same time every day. Upon reviewing R3’s record, V16 found no documentation of when the previous evening’s metoprolol dose was given and could not determine whether it had been administered, noting that nurses should document all administrations or refusals. The DON (V2) confirmed that facility policy allows a one-hour before and after window for medication administration and that medications for residents on dialysis should be scheduled so they can be administered at the same time every day, with nurses expected to notify the provider if scheduled times conflict with dialysis. V2 verified that R3’s nifedipine and metoprolol were scheduled for 9:00 AM, during dialysis chair time, and that R3 had not been consistently receiving these medications at the ordered times. V2 stated that V18 could have administered the medications closer to the scheduled time and confirmed there was no documentation that the 6:00 PM metoprolol dose was given on 4/12/2026. Review of R3’s Medication Administration Audit Report showed multiple late administrations of metoprolol and nifedipine on various dates, as well as missing documentation for certain metoprolol doses. R3’s progress notes contained only one entry indicating the resident requested morning medications after dialysis, with no further documentation explaining late administrations or provider notification about late or missed doses. These practices conflicted with facility policies requiring medications to be administered within 60 minutes of the scheduled time, accurate documentation of administration or refusal, and explanatory notes when doses are withheld, refused, or given at times other than scheduled. A second resident (R2), admitted with diagnoses including type 2 diabetes, hypertension, schizophrenia, atrial fibrillation, chronic right heart failure, and a left below-knee amputation, and cognitively intact with a BIMS score of 13, reported that nurses had R2’s medication doses and times wrong and that medications were often passed late or not given at all. Hospital discharge documentation for R2 listed Eliquis 5 mg to be taken orally twice daily, but R2’s March MAR showed an order for Eliquis 5 mg once daily starting shortly after admission, and R2 received the medication only once daily for eight days. The MAR later reflected a corrected order for Eliquis 5 mg twice daily. A progress note documented that pharmacy contacted the facility on 3/10/26 stating Eliquis is always given twice daily and that the MD needed to correct the order; the nurse noted reaching out to the provider but receiving no response at that time. The consultant pharmacist confirmed that Eliquis is never given once daily, that manufacturer recommendations are for twice-daily dosing, and that once-daily dosing for atrial fibrillation management could lead to irregular heart rate or increased risk for clots. The DON stated that the admitting nurse entered the Eliquis order incorrectly, that Eliquis is supposed to be given BID, and that R2 received the wrong Eliquis dose for a few days. Facility policies titled “Guidelines For Physician Orders (Following Physician Orders)” and “Section 5.0 Medication Administration” require that physician orders be accurately implemented and followed, that two nurses review admission and readmission orders as a double check, and that medications be administered as prescribed and within 60 minutes of the scheduled time. These policies also require that unusual doses or orders that appear inconsistent with a resident’s diagnosis be clarified with the physician prior to administration, that the MAR be initialed for each dose given, and that any withheld, refused, or off-schedule doses be circled and explained in the record, with physician notification if two consecutive doses are withheld or refused. The observed late, inconsistent, and undocumented administration of antihypertensive medications for R3, the lack of timely rescheduling or provider notification related to dialysis conflicts, and the incorrect once-daily Eliquis order and administration for R2, despite pharmacy input and existing policies, collectively demonstrate the facility’s failure to ensure residents were free from significant medication errors and to adhere to its own medication administration procedures.
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