Failure to Provide Timely Admission Medications and to Document Witnessed Fall
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure that a newly admitted resident received ordered medications upon admission and the failure to document a witnessed fall in another resident’s electronic health record. Resident R156, with a history including COPD, hypokalemia, alcohol abuse with withdrawal, rheumatoid arthritis, hypothyroidism, noninfective gastroenteritis, and chest pain, was admitted on 4/20/2026 between approximately 1:30 PM and 2:00 PM. The after-visit summary and scanned admission documents listed multiple medications, including gabapentin, ipratropium‑albuterol nebulizer, mirtazapine, albuterol inhaler, amlodipine‑benazepril, diphenoxylate‑atropine (Lomotil), levothyroxine, montelukast, pantoprazole, Trelegy Ellipta, nicotine patches, and thiamine. Despite this, the medication administration record showed that on 4/20/2026, mirtazapine, Ativan 1 mg every 8 hours for anxiety, ipratropium‑albuterol nebulizer, Lomotil, and albuterol inhaler were not signed out as given. On 4/21/2026, R156 and her daughter reported that the resident did not receive any medications from the time of admission the previous afternoon until the morning of 4/21/2026. R156 stated she was upset, was awake all night, and did not receive her anxiety medication or breathing treatment, and that the nurse on duty repeatedly told her she was working on the medications. The daughter stated she had handed the hospital medication list to the social worker on arrival and did not understand why medications were not provided on time. LPN V25 reported that R156 arrived around 2:00 PM, that she took initial vital signs and handed the resident off to the afternoon nurse, and that the medication list was not available at that time. V25 stated some medications were in the cart the following morning and that she was unsure why the 6:00 AM medications had not been given, but she administered them within the allowable time window. The Admissions Director (V44) stated that R156 arrived around 2:00 PM with paperwork including a medication list and five prescriptions, and that these documents were scanned into the system at 4:00 PM. V44 reported that the front desk failed to return the paperwork to the person transporting the resident to the unit and that the documents were given to nursing staff when they requested them. The DON (V2) stated that for new admissions, the nurse is supposed to send the medication list to the pharmacy after verifying medications with the physician and clarifying the expected time of arrival, and that if medications do not arrive on time, nurses are to use the emergency box, which contains Ativan, ipratropium‑albuterol, and albuterol. The facility was unable to provide a policy on ordering medications for new admissions when requested. The deficiency also includes the facility’s failure to document a witnessed fall for Resident R8. R8, who has diagnoses including type 2 diabetes mellitus, hypertension, and spastic quadriplegia, reported that on 3/16/2026 a CNA (later identified as V40) was changing him, placed him on his side facing the window, and that he then ended up on the floor, naked. He stated the CNA left him on the floor for about 35 minutes and later returned with other staff (V17 and V41) to pick him up. R8 reported that he informed an LPN (V16) the next day that he had fallen and that she told him he needed to go to the hospital. Multiple CNAs (V17, V40, and V41) later described seeing R8 on the floor between the bed and the window and stated that LPN V25 came into the room, assessed him on the floor, took vital signs, and then assisted with or directed his transfer back to bed. In contrast, LPN V25 stated that CNA V40 told her that R8 was slipping out of bed but that she (V40) was able to put him back in bed and that he did not touch the floor. V25 reported that she did not see CNAs V17 or V41 in the room, did not assess R8 on the floor, and that when she asked R8, he said he did not fall. The Administrator (V1) stated this was the first time he was hearing about the incident and noted that staff were giving different stories. The DON (V2) stated that all falls should be documented so that the physician and family can be notified and the care plan updated, and that documentation should occur immediately after a fall. R8’s records showed a fall entry dated 3/17/2026 documenting that the resident self‑reported to the nurse on duty that he had fallen the night prior, stating he fell from the bed, hit his head, and that his head was hurting. The note indicated that after investigation and an IDT meeting it was determined that no fall occurred because staff had no knowledge of the incident and that R8 was described as extremely confused and unable to get up unassisted. However, per the later statements of CNAs V17, V40, and V41, they all witnessed R8 on the floor and reported that V25 assessed him there. No progress notes were found for a witnessed fall on 3/16/2026, and the care plan, which already identified R8 as at risk for falls and required MD and family notification for any new fall, was not updated with a new fall or new interventions related to this event.
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