Failure to Administer Ordered Medications, Maintain Continuous Oxygen, and Monitor Resident Whereabouts
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure that nursing services met professional standards of quality for one resident with multiple chronic conditions, including COPD requiring continuous oxygen, diabetes mellitus, heart failure, major depressive disorder, and use of antipsychotic, antidepressant, and hypoglycemic medications. Physician orders directed that the resident receive multiple scheduled medications between 4:00 PM and 9:00 PM, including inhaled medications for COPD, Metformin for diabetes, Sertraline, Varenicline, Atorvastatin, Quetiapine, Trazodone, and continuous oxygen at 3 L/min via nasal cannula. The facility’s own policies required medications to be administered as ordered within one hour before or after the scheduled time, with documentation of administration or refusal, and prompt reporting and documentation of medication errors and physician notification. On the evening in question, the Medication Administration Record for the 3:00 PM–11:00 PM shift showed no evidence that any of the resident’s scheduled medications or continuous oxygen treatment were administered between 4:00 PM and 9:00 PM. RN #1, who was responsible for the resident’s care during that shift, stated they arrived on the unit at 4:15 PM, did not see the resident during rounds, and were told by unknown staff that the resident had a visitor. RN #1 reported they did not look for the resident, assuming the resident was with the visitor, and acknowledged that the 4:00 PM medications were not given for that reason. RN #1 further stated they were aware that the 4:00 PM, 8:00 PM, and 9:00 PM medications were not administered and did not recall notifying the RN supervisor or the physician, despite knowing they were required to do so when medications were not given. From approximately 4:15 PM until 9:49 PM, nursing and direct care staff were unaware of the resident’s whereabouts. The CNA accountability record for the 3:00 PM–11:00 PM shift contained no hourly safety checks or meal documentation for the resident after 2:45 PM. At about 9:49 PM, the resident was found on the floor beside the bed, face down, unresponsive, with no pulse and no respirations, and not connected to any oxygen source. A stat was called, CPR was initiated, and EMS arrived at 10:07 PM and later pronounced the resident deceased at 10:24 PM. The incident report and nursing progress note did not document that the resident had been missing for several hours, that staff were unaware of the resident’s whereabouts from 4:15 PM to 9:49 PM, that no 4:00 PM, 8:00 PM, and 9:00 PM medications were administered, or that the resident was not on oxygen when found. The Medical Director, DON, Administrator, and attending physician all reported they were not informed at the time that the resident had been missing for hours or that the evening medications and continuous oxygen had not been provided, and the Medical Director stated they did not review the chart and were not made aware of the missed medications until days later. The facility’s investigation documentation concluded the incident appeared related to a medical event and initially indicated there was no cause to believe abuse, mistreatment, or neglect had occurred. However, the investigation form did not include the fact that the resident’s whereabouts were unknown for several hours, that the resident did not receive ordered medications and treatments during the evening shift, or that the resident was not connected to oxygen when found. Supervisory nursing staff who responded to the emergency confirmed that when they arrived, the resident was already on the floor unresponsive and that no oxygen was connected. The Medical Director and other leadership staff stated they were not made aware that the resident had been missing or that medications and treatments were not administered as ordered during the relevant time period. These omissions in monitoring, medication administration, treatment provision, and timely, accurate reporting and documentation formed the basis of the cited deficiency under 10 NYCRR 415.11(c)(3)(i).
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