Significant Medication Errors from Missed Transcription, Unavailable Medications, and Unupdated Orders
Summary
The deficiency involves failures to accurately transcribe and administer medications according to physician orders, resulting in significant medication errors for two residents. One resident with a diagnosis of epilepsy was discharged from the hospital with instructions to discontinue a previous phenytoin regimen and start phenytoin 300 mg at bedtime following an admission for elevated phenytoin level, altered mental status, and a urinary tract infection. The new phenytoin order was not entered into the resident’s electronic medical record for the entire stay from admission through discharge, and the physician orders for that period did not include phenytoin. The Assistant DON, who admitted the resident, acknowledged missing the new phenytoin order and failing to enter it, and the DON confirmed that the resident never received any phenytoin while in the facility, despite the resident’s known history of seizures and prior use of Dilantin. The DON also stated she attempted to clarify medication orders with the hospital but did not receive a response and did not follow through. The resident subsequently experienced a seizure in the facility, documented as shaking, foaming at the mouth, and eyes rolled back, lasting three to four minutes, and was transported to the hospital, where emergency documentation noted the resident had not been taking Dilantin and had a low Dilantin level. Another resident with diagnoses including hypertensive heart and chronic kidney disease with heart failure, hypertension, atrial fibrillation, and type II diabetes mellitus did not receive multiple ordered medications due to unavailability and lack of appropriate follow-up. Physician orders included metformin ER 500 mg twice daily, apixaban 5 mg twice daily, and empagliflozin 25 mg once daily. The MAR showed missed doses of apixaban on multiple occasions and missed doses of empagliflozin and metformin on several days, all documented as due to the medications being unavailable. Nursing staff reported that when they could not find these medications in the medication cart, they did not administer them and, in several instances, did not notify the DON, pharmacy, or physician, contrary to the facility’s stated expectations. One nurse reported requesting a refill from the pharmacy for apixaban and notifying the DON, but did not call or speak directly to a pharmacist and did not notify the physician of the missed doses. The same resident also received an incorrect dose of dulaglutide over an extended period due to failures to update physician orders after dose changes were communicated. A physician progress note documented an order change to increase dulaglutide from 1.5 mg subcutaneously weekly to 3 mg, and this change was later re-sent via facsimile, but the order was not updated in the resident’s physician orders. The facility’s electronic medical record showed receipt of the faxed order to increase the dose, yet the physician orders remained unchanged. The facility driver described a process in which orders and progress notes from outside appointments are copied and distributed to key staff, and the ADON stated that the expectation is for the nurse on duty to enter medication change orders when received. Despite this, the MAR from late November through mid-April documented continued administration of dulaglutide 1.5 mg weekly, and the ADON confirmed that during this entire period the resident received the wrong dose. The facility’s medication error policy states that medications shall be administered according to physician orders and defines medication errors as including wrong drug and wrong dose, among other categories.
Penalty
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