Multiple Medication Administration Errors and Late or Missed Doses Across Several Residents
Summary
The deficiency involves multiple failures in medication administration and documentation that resulted in residents not being free from significant medication errors. One resident with insomnia, adult failure to thrive, and type 2 diabetes with polyneuropathy had physician orders for Belsomra at bedtime for insomnia and glyburide daily for diabetes. The resident reported not receiving her sleeping medication the prior week, stating she could not fall asleep, lay awake all night, and felt exhausted the next day. Pharmacy records showed Belsomra was delivered in limited quantities on specific dates and glyburide was only partially supplied due to insurance coverage, yet the Medication Administration Records (MARs) documented that both medications were administered daily over periods when the medications were not available in the building or in the emergency kit. During this same period, the resident’s blood glucose readings, which had previously fluctuated within a lower range, began to rise and remained consistently elevated. Another resident with type 2 diabetes had an order for insulin lispro on a sliding scale to be given subcutaneously before meals and at bedtime. Audit reports for a defined period showed that multiple doses scheduled for morning, late morning, and evening were administered more than an hour late on several days. A separate resident with heart failure, atrial fibrillation, and hypertension had an order for sodium chloride tablets to be given three times daily with meals. On the day of observation, the RN responsible for the 8:00 AM medication pass stated she never had medications administered on time and that it was not realistic to complete all medication passes due to the number of residents. She was still passing 8:00 AM medications late in the morning, and another nurse who took over her cart later stated she did not know when earlier doses had been given and decided that multiple midday doses for medications ordered three or four times daily would have to be skipped, acknowledging this would result in more medication errors. The MAR for the resident on sodium chloride showed the noon dose held with a code indicating “Hold – See Progress Notes,” and lab results around that time documented a low sodium level. Additional errors were observed with other residents. One resident with chronic pain, low back pain, and recurrent depressive disorders had an order for pregabalin three times daily for nerve pain. The nurse was observed administering pregabalin at a time corresponding to the 2:00 PM dose, but the MAR for that dose was marked as held with a “Hold – See Progress Notes” code, and there was no documentation that as-needed Tylenol ordered for mild pain had been given that day. Another resident with major depressive disorder, schizophrenia, and epilepsy had orders for lamotrigine, levetiracetam, and topiramate to be administered at 8:00 AM, yet these medications were observed being given late in the morning instead of at the scheduled time. The facility’s medication administration policy required medications to be recorded immediately after ingestion, required physician notification when orders could not be followed, and required checking physician orders against the MAR to assure proper administration, but the observed practices and documentation did not align with these requirements across multiple residents and medications. A further issue involved the facility’s own staff statements about systemic timeliness problems. The RN passing morning medications openly stated that medications were never administered on time and that there were no limits on how many residents a nurse could have, making it unrealistic to complete medication passes as scheduled. Another nurse, upon assuming responsibility for the medication cart mid-pass, expressed uncertainty about when earlier doses had been administered and indicated that, due to the lateness of the morning pass, she would skip certain scheduled doses for medications ordered multiple times per day. These statements, combined with the documented late administrations, held doses, and MAR entries indicating medications were given when pharmacy records showed they were not available, demonstrate a pattern of noncompliance with the facility’s own medication administration policy and the requirement to ensure residents are free from significant medication errors. The cumulative findings across these residents show that medications were not consistently available, were administered late, were skipped without clear clinical documentation, or were inaccurately documented as given. Residents with conditions such as diabetes, insomnia, epilepsy, chronic pain, and electrolyte abnormalities were directly affected by these practices. The facility’s policy expectations for timely administration, accurate documentation, and prompt physician notification when orders could not be followed were not met in these instances, leading to the cited deficiency in ensuring residents are free from significant medication errors.
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