Failure to Assess and Ensure Safe Storage of Self-Administered Medications
Summary
The facility failed to assess two residents for the self-administration of medications and to ensure the self-administered medications were safely stored. Resident #73 was found with an allergy nasal spray bottle, three vials of unknown eye drops, and a medication bottle on the bedside dresser. The resident did not have an order for the nasal spray and was only allowed to keep eye drops at the bedside as per the order received on 5/18/24. The Medication Self-Administration Safety Screen for Resident #73 did not include the nasal spray, and the resident's care plan did not reflect the ability to self-administer medications. Staff E, LPN/UM, acknowledged that the screening should have included all medications and that the resident should have been care planned for self-administration. Resident #178 was observed with an unopened box of pain relief topical patches, an opened roll-on pain reliever, and a tube of honey gel within reach. The resident admitted to using the roll-on pain reliever and stated that the family member brought the patches. The facility did not have an order for these medications, and the resident's care plan did not reflect the ability to self-administer pain medication. Staff E, LPN/UM, reported that Resident #178 should have been screened for self-administration and expressed doubt about the resident's capability to self-administer due to the need for staff assistance. The facility's policy on Resident Self-Administration of Medication requires an interdisciplinary team to determine if self-administration is clinically appropriate and to document the resident's preference. The policy also mandates secure storage of medications and regular assessments. Both residents were not properly assessed, and their care plans did not reflect their ability to self-administer medications, leading to the deficiency noted in the report.
Penalty
Resources
Below are regulatory guidelines relevant to this citation:
Trusted data from CMS and state health departments
Every citation, penalty and Plan of Correction is sourced from public CMS records (latest release May 27, 2026) and official state health department websites — never guesswork.
Trusted by long-term care providers and associations.



