Failure to Monitor and Document Antipsychotic Use and GDR for Two Residents
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to ensure that residents' drug regimens were free from unnecessary psychotropic medications, specifically antipsychotics, as required by policy and regulation. For one resident with Alzheimer's disease, dementia with agitation, major depressive disorder, and anxiety, Seroquel was administered routinely without identifying or monitoring resident-specific target behaviors or signs and symptoms of potential adverse consequences. Physician's orders for Seroquel did not specify targeted behaviors or monitoring parameters, and the medical record lacked documentation of monitoring for efficacy or adverse effects. For another resident with Alzheimer's disease, depression, and anxiety, Seroquel was also administered on a routine basis. The medical record did not contain a documented rationale for the use of Seroquel, nor was there evidence that a gradual dose reduction (GDR) was attempted or that a clinical contraindication to GDR was documented by the prescriber. Although a consultant psychiatric nurse practitioner recommended against GDR due to potential psychiatric destabilization, this recommendation was not reviewed or documented by the attending physician or nurse practitioner in the resident's record. Interviews with facility staff, including the Director of Nursing and Social Worker, confirmed that there was no documentation of resident-specific targeted behaviors, monitoring for adverse consequences, or rationale for continued use of Seroquel. The Director of Nursing acknowledged that these elements should have been documented but were not completed for the residents in question.