Medication administration errors with missed psychotropic doses and blood pressure medications given outside ordered parameters
Summary
The facility failed to keep residents free from significant medication errors for two residents. One resident had diagnoses including generalized anxiety disorder, bipolar disorder, major depressive disorder with psychotic symptoms, and psychotic disorder with hallucinations due to a known physiological condition, and had severe cognitive impairment with a BIMS score of 5 out of 15. The resident’s care plan directed staff to administer psychotropic medications as ordered. Review of the order recap and MAR showed repeated risperidone 25 mg IM orders scheduled every 14 days, but the MAR also showed multiple missed administrations and delayed doses, including gaps of 17 days and 29 days between injections. Progress notes documented that the medication was not available or was on order, and staff documented that the pharmacy was aware or that the medication was on order. Interviews showed staff expected to document omissions and notify the physician and family or resident when medication was unavailable, but the RN who documented one omission stated she did not know why there was a delay, and another RN stated she ordered immediate delivery but did not know whether the medication was later administered. The pharmacist stated risperidone was scheduled every 14 days because of its pharmacokinetics and that the wide gaps could affect therapeutic levels. The psychiatric nurse practitioner stated she had not been contacted about the unavailability of risperidone and expressed concern that the medication could become subtherapeutic and the resident might decompensate quickly if it wore off. The DON and ED both stated they expected medications to be administered promptly and physicians to be notified when doses were not given. A second resident had diagnoses including atrial fibrillation, congestive heart failure, and hypertension, and had severe cognitive impairment with a BIMS score of 4 out of 15. The resident’s care plan identified risk for impaired cardiac output and directed staff to administer medications as ordered and check vital signs as ordered. The resident had orders for midodrine, metoprolol tartrate, and verapamil with specific hold parameters based on blood pressure and pulse. Review of the MARs for multiple months showed numerous instances where metoprolol and verapamil were documented as administered even though the resident’s blood pressure was below the ordered parameters, and one instance where midodrine was documented as administered when the systolic blood pressure was above the ordered parameter. During interview, the LPN stated that if vital signs were out of range the medication should be held, and if the MAR did not show a hold code then the medication was considered given. The LPN reviewed the MARs and stated she was not aware she had not followed the physician’s orders so many times. RN2, the NP, the DON, and the ED all stated that giving medications outside ordered parameters was a medication error and that staff were expected to follow the physician’s orders and document accurately whether medications were given or held.
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