Failure to Provide Psychiatric Evaluations for Residents on Psychotropic Medications
Summary
The facility failed to ensure that residents receiving psychotropic medications were evaluated by a psychiatrist for the appropriateness of their medication regimen. This deficiency affected four residents who were on various psychotropic medications, including Cymbalta, Ativan, Seroquel, Depakote, Mirtazapine, Haloperidol, and Donepezil. These residents had diagnoses such as major depressive disorder and dementia, and the facility did not provide psychiatric evaluations to assess the appropriateness, effectiveness, and need for adjustments in their medication dosages. Resident 2, who had a diagnosis of major depressive disorder, was admitted to the facility and had been taking psychotropic medications since admission without a psychiatric evaluation since February 2023. Similarly, Resident 17, with diagnoses including dementia and bipolar disorder, had not been evaluated by a psychiatrist since November 2021, despite being on multiple psychotropic medications. Resident 19, admitted with dementia and agitation, had never been assessed by a psychiatrist for the need for psychotropic medication since admission. Resident 51, with dementia and psychotic disturbance, had a psychiatric consult ordered but had not been evaluated by a psychiatrist as of the report date. The facility also failed to include a psychiatrist in the Interdisciplinary Team (IDT) meetings to evaluate the residents' behavior and use of psychotropic medication. This oversight led to a lack of proper assessment and planning for the care of residents regarding the need and appropriateness of a gradual dose reduction of psychotropic medications. Additionally, the facility did not adhere to its policies and procedures related to dementia care, antipsychotic medication use, and behavioral assessment, intervention, and monitoring, which contributed to the deficiency.
Removal Plan
- Residents 2, 17, 19, and 51 will be evaluated by a psychiatrist, with evaluations completed. Ongoing monthly psychiatric services will be provided for these residents.
- Evaluations and routine psychiatric services will be completed for residents with psychiatric diagnoses upon admission, thereafter, and as needed by a Psychiatrist.
- The facility will have a monthly Behavioral Intervention Treatment meeting to discuss and review residents on psychotropic medication, with attendance from the Licensed Psychiatrist and the Licensed Pharmacist.
- Residents with a behavioral change in condition will be placed on a 72-hour change of condition monitoring using the facility's Behavior Log.
- All licensed nurses, including IDT members, the DON, the ADON, the ADSS, and the MDS coordinator, were in-serviced on psychiatric diagnosis and the need for a psychologist or psychiatrist consult for residents on psychotropic medication.
- The Director of Staff Development will conduct another in-service for those not present, and will schedule in-services for those on leave or vacation.
- The facility will ensure they can meet the needs of residents with psychiatric or behavioral needs based on the updated Facility Assessment.
- Psychiatric Services have been added to the Facility Assessment, and a psychiatric services company has been obtained to evaluate residents with psychiatric diagnoses.
- A Psychiatrist/Psychiatric Nurse Practitioner will participate in the monthly Behavioral Intervention Treatment meeting for residents receiving psychotropic medications.
- The Psychiatrist/Psychiatric Nurse Practitioner will make routine rounding visits to assess medication effectiveness and dosage needs.
- The facility's DON will monitor residents on psychotropic medications to ensure they receive monthly psychiatric services.
- The Associate Director of Social Services/SSD will report the number of residents and visits to the facility's Quality Assurance Performance Improvement quarterly monitoring meetings with a threshold of 100%.
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.



