Failure to Provide Required Medications During Therapeutic Leave Resulting in Elevated BP and Increased Anxiety
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure a resident was free from significant medication errors during a therapeutic leave, specifically by not providing required morning medications for multiple days. The facility’s own Therapeutic Leave policy states that staff will coordinate with the resident or representative regarding the length of time away to ensure adequate amounts and appropriate medications are ready for administration while on leave. For this cognitively intact resident with diagnoses including schizoaffective disorder bipolar type, suicidal ideations, major depressive disorder (recurrent), essential hypertension, mixed hyperlipidemia, restlessness and agitation, and anxiety disorder, the medical record showed standing orders for several daily morning medications: Amlodipine/Benazepril for hypertension, Cariprazine for schizoaffective disorder, Fenofibrate for hyperlipidemia, Wellbutrin XL for depression, and Hydroxyzine for anxiety. The record contained no documentation that all of these medications were sent with the resident for the therapeutic leave. The resident went on therapeutic leave from a Friday to the following Monday. On the morning after leaving, the resident called the facility and reported he had not received his morning medications and that they had not been packed for the remainder of the home visit. An LPN documented this call, apologized, told the resident he could return so staff could check what medications were missing, and noted that the resident stated he would try to stay on the home visit but would go to the ER if he had problems. The LPN reported notifying the Administrator. The resident later produced white envelope medication packets labeled with his name and specific dates and times to take at 5 p.m., indicating he had evening medications for several days, but he stated he did not receive any morning medication packets for the three days he was away. The facility’s nurse consultant confirmed there was no note in the chart indicating medications were sent, that the MAR did not show he was sent home with his medications, and that an agency nurse on the p.m. shift had packed the medications. Upon the resident’s return, his blood pressure was documented as significantly elevated at 198/101 compared to 126/84 on the morning before he left. The resident reported that this was the highest his blood pressure had ever been and attributed it to not receiving his blood pressure medications for three days. He also reported increased anxiety, dizziness, and headaches after the weekend, and voiced increased depression and anxiety upon return. A subsequent medication regimen review noted that the resident’s elevated blood pressure upon return could have been secondary to missing his Amlodipine/Benazepril, and described the half-lives and potential effects of abruptly missing his other medications, including Cariprazine, Fenofibrate, Wellbutrin XL, and Hydroxyzine. The review also noted that Hydroxyzine had been ordered twice daily during the home visit period and that abrupt discontinuation could result in rebound anxiety. The resident’s care plan did not document any history of false allegations or untruthfulness, and staff acknowledged that he had not previously complained of missing medications on home visits. These documented omissions and resulting clinical changes formed the basis of the cited significant medication error.
Penalty
Resources
Below are regulatory guidelines relevant to this citation:
Trusted data from CMS and state health departments
Every citation, penalty and Plan of Correction is sourced from public CMS records (latest release June 24, 2026) and official state health department websites — never guesswork.
Trusted by long-term care providers and associations.



