Failure to Administer IV Vancomycin as Ordered
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure that IV vancomycin was administered as ordered for a resident being treated for an infection of a right knee prosthesis. The resident was admitted with multiple diagnoses including infection and inflammatory reaction due to an internal right knee prosthesis, aftercare following knee joint prosthesis, fracture of the right patella, depression, anxiety, heart failure, and seizures, and was cognitively intact per the MDS. The care plan identified an active infection of the right knee prosthesis with an intervention to administer antibiotics per physician orders. The physician’s vancomycin order, as reflected on the Order Summary Report, specified vancomycin 1000 mg (1.5 g) twice daily with instructions from the pharmacy that doses must be given within a 30‑minute window and that if a dose was more than 30 minutes late, the pharmacy should be called for retiming to avoid inaccurate trough levels and dosing. The Medication Administration Record for the initial treatment period documented vancomycin 1000 mg (1.5 g) twice daily for infection, but did not include administration times. The Medication Administration Audit Report later showed that vancomycin was scheduled for 6:30 AM and 6:00 PM, yet multiple doses were administered significantly late. Morning doses were given several hours after the scheduled time on multiple consecutive days, and evening doses were also administered hours late on several occasions. These late administrations occurred despite the pharmacy’s explicit instruction that the medication must be administered within a 30‑minute window and that late doses required contacting the pharmacy for retiming orders. The resident reported to surveyors that he did not receive his IV antibiotics the way he should when he first moved to the facility and later approached the nurses’ station to voice concerns that his IV vancomycin was given later than the due time, stating he knew when it was supposed to be administered. A pharmacist, when contacted as documented in the progress note, stated that if the reported late administration time was accurate, the vancomycin trough would be off, leading to incorrect dosing, and reiterated that the medication must be administered within a 30‑minute window with pharmacy notification if given more than 30 minutes late. The ADON stated she was not aware of the antibiotics being administered at incorrect times and believed no doses were missed, while the DON acknowledged that the antibiotic had been administered late at times when no RN was working and suggested that some doses might have been given on time but not documented at the time of administration. The facility’s Medication Administration Policy required drugs to be administered in accordance with practitioner orders and within one hour before or after the scheduled time unless otherwise ordered, and to be recorded promptly after administration, which was not followed in this case.
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