Psychotropic medications lacked indication, monitoring, and required review
Summary
The facility did not ensure that psychotropic medications were supported by an adequate indication for use, monitored for behaviors and adverse side effects, or managed with gradual dose reduction attempts or documented clinical contraindications. Surveyors identified that for 5 of 32 sampled residents, the record did not show appropriate indication, behavior monitoring, non-pharmacological interventions, adverse side effect monitoring, or required psychotropic review documentation. The cited residents included individuals with diagnoses such as dementia, insomnia, anxiety, major depressive disorder, delirium, Parkinson’s disease, and generalized anxiety disorder. For one resident with dementia, insomnia, a right femur fracture, and pain, the record showed scheduled and PRN Seroquel orders and PRN Tylenol PM use. The PRN Seroquel was given for anxiety and crying, including administration shortly before a scheduled dose, and Tylenol PM was given multiple times for pain and sleep, including several administrations before bedtime and not as ordered. No documentation was found for behavior monitoring, non-pharmacological interventions, or adverse side effect monitoring for Seroquel. The psychotropic review form listed Seroquel for anxiety but did not contain an individualized rationale, and the DON stated the resident did not have a diagnosis such as schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, or major depressive disorder to support the antipsychotic use. For another resident with insomnia, major depressive disorder, and generalized anxiety disorder, the record showed clonazepam, sertraline, trazodone, and a prior Seroquel review, but no documentation was found for behavior monitoring, non-pharmacological interventions, or adverse side effect monitoring for the psychotropic medications. The psychotropic review dated in 2024 recommended continuing the same doses, but no additional psychotropic review was found afterward and no attempted GDR was documented. The DON stated the GDR was not found in the chart. A resident with Parkinson’s disease, dementia, anxiety, delirium, and hypersomnia had multiple benzodiazepine and Seroquel orders, but no additional psychotropic medication reviews or GDRs were located after the November 2024 review, which had recommended decreasing Seroquel at bedtime. A resident with Alzheimer’s disease, anxiety, and dementia had orders for haloperidol PRN for anxiety, hydroxyzine PRN for restlessness, scheduled Seroquel for anxiety disorder due to known physiological condition, and additional Seroquel without a diagnosis listed. The record did not contain behavior monitoring, psychotropic meetings, or physician rationales for the antipsychotic use, and the DON stated the resident did not have a psychotropic meeting documented. Another resident with major depressive disorder, generalized anxiety, and insomnia had an open-ended hydroxyzine PRN order that was not limited to 14 days and lacked a documented clinical rationale to extend it. The record also lacked behavior monitoring, sleep tracking, and adverse side effect monitoring for clonazepam, sertraline, and trazodone, and the DON stated he could not find a justification to continue the hydroxyzine.
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