Failure to Ensure Availability of Ordered Pain Medication and Timely IV Antibiotic Administration
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure that ordered pain medication was consistently available and that IV antibiotics were administered within the prescribed time parameters for one cognitively intact resident with complex medical needs. The resident was admitted with an infected right knee prosthesis, recent knee replacement surgery, fracture of the right patella, depression, anxiety, heart failure, and seizures, and had a care plan intervention to receive analgesia as ordered, including prior to treatments. The resident’s MDS documented frequent pain with intensities up to 8/10, and physician orders included oxycodone 5 mg, two tablets every four hours as needed for pain, along with pain monitoring every shift. Despite these orders, the resident reported going 2–3 days without pain medication upon admission and stated that pain medications ran out on weekends, limiting his movement due to pain. On admission and in the days immediately following, multiple nursing notes document that oxycodone was not available because the pharmacy had not received or processed a valid prescription. On the night of admission, staff contacted the pharmacy for emergency access to oxycodone, but the pharmacy reported no script on file. The DON documented that the pharmacy had not received the prescription, and the house supervisor at the discharging hospital indicated the order would need to come from the surgeon the next day. The resident complained of pain, refused PRN Tylenol, and ultimately requested transfer to the hospital due to lack of pain medication; EMS transported him when a prescription still could not be obtained. When the resident returned from the hospital, the ADON faxed the oxycodone prescription but did not immediately request a one-time emergency dose because the resident was speaking to her in a hostile manner and she chose to wait until the pharmacy processed the order. The pharmacy later reported the hospital script was incomplete due to a missing DEA number, preventing issuance of a one-time dose. Progress notes show the resident continued to demand oxycodone, became angry when it was not available, and that his oxycodone did not arrive until the morning of 3/30. Subsequently, the resident experienced additional episodes where oxycodone was not available as ordered. Documentation on 4/9 shows that all six tablets previously stocked in the emergency dispensing system had been used, a refill request had been submitted, but the medication had not yet been received; the resident was offered and accepted Extra Strength Tylenol as an alternative. On 4/12, nursing notes document that no oxycodone was available in the narcotic box despite prior refill attempts and pharmacy contact, and the resident again received Tylenol instead. The MAR and staff interviews indicate that from the morning dose on 4/12 until the evening dose on 4/13, oxycodone was not available for administration. The ADON acknowledged the resident had run out of oxycodone more than once and could not explain why it was not available, while other staff confirmed that residents had complained about running out of narcotics and that refills could take a while. The nurse practitioner stated she ordered a seven-day supply each time and had noticed an issue with ensuring pain medication availability. The deficiency also includes failure to administer IV vancomycin within the ordered time window. The resident had an order for vancomycin 1.5 g twice daily with explicit pharmacy instructions that it be administered within a 30-minute window of the scheduled time and that if given more than 30 minutes late, nursing should call the pharmacy for retiming orders to avoid inaccurate trough levels and dosing. The medication administration audit shows that multiple morning doses scheduled for 6:30 AM were given several hours late on consecutive days, and several evening doses scheduled for 6:00 PM were also administered significantly past the ordered time. The resident voiced concerns to staff that his vancomycin was being given later than due, including a report that a dose was given at approximately 2:30 PM, and requested that the nurse call the pharmacy. The pharmacist confirmed that late administration could affect trough accuracy and reiterated the requirement for administration within a 30-minute window and for pharmacy contact if doses were more than 30 minutes late. The RN and DON later acknowledged that vancomycin had been administered late at times, particularly when an RN was not working, and the pharmacist emphasized the importance of timely administration for appropriate drug clearance and dosing. The facility’s own medication administration policy states that drugs are to be administered in accordance with practitioner orders and that medications shall be administered within one hour before or after the scheduled time unless otherwise ordered, and that medications must be recorded on the MAR promptly after administration. Despite this policy, the documented record shows repeated unavailability of ordered oxycodone and repeated late administration of vancomycin outside the specified time parameters for this resident.
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