Improper Medication Cart Security and Failure to Label and Remove Outdated Medications
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure that medications were securely stored and properly labeled in accordance with facility policy and accepted professional standards. On Wing Three, surveyors observed the front medication cart unlocked and unattended, with the first drawer containing two unlabeled cups of pre‑poured medications. Each cup contained multiple different pills, and the responsible LPN stated they had walked away from the cart to speak with a family member and acknowledged the cart should never be left unlocked and unattended. The LPN also stated that one resident was not available for medication administration and that they were waiting for another resident’s inhaler from the pharmacy, and admitted they were unsure what to do with pre‑poured medications when a resident was unavailable. Further observations on the Wing Three back cart revealed multiple issues with labeling and expiration of medications. Surveyors found an opened, unlabeled, and undated vial of lidocaine in the second drawer, which the assigned LPN stated came with ertapenem and had not been labeled or dated when opened; the LPN was unsure whether it needed to be dated. The third drawer contained an undated fluticasone/salmeterol inhaler, which the LPN acknowledged should probably have been labeled when opened but was not. Another drawer contained a Rezvoglar insulin pen and a Humulin R insulin vial with open dates indicating they were beyond the stated in‑use period; the LPN confirmed they were expired and should be discarded and reordered, and could not explain why expired insulin remained in the cart. The same drawer also contained an opened, undated insulin lispro vial and an opened, undated Lantus insulin pen, which the LPN stated were required to be dated when opened but could not determine when they had been opened or whether they were expired. On Wing Four, surveyors observed additional failures to date and label opened medications. In the first drawer of the back medication cart, artificial tears and latanoprost eye drops were found opened without open dates, despite the assigned LPN stating that eye drops were supposed to be labeled with an open date and an expiration date and that they expired 30 days after opening; the LPN was unsure why these eye drops lacked open dates. In the third drawer, opened, undated inhalers (including umeclidinium/vilanterol and albuterol) were found without labeling to indicate when they were opened. The LPN assigned to this cart stated they had never been trained that inhalers had to be labeled when opened, did not think inhalers expired, and believed they were good until the medication was finished, despite the unit manager later stating that inhalers and eye drops should be dated when opened and were typically good for 30 days. Facility policies in effect required medication storage compartments to be locked when unattended, prohibited use of outdated drugs, and required multi‑dose medications to be dated when opened.
Penalty
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