Failure to Ensure Competent IV Therapy Administration by Agency LPN
Penalty
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure that an IV medication was administered by a competent licensed nurse and to verify and document IV therapy competencies for an agency LPN. A resident was admitted with a postoperative wound infection, a PICC line placed in the right upper arm for long-term IV antibiotic therapy, and multiple comorbidities including diabetes, liver disease, hypertension, anemia, depression, and a history of stroke. The resident had an order for IV cefepime 2 g in 100 ml normal saline to be given three times daily via the PICC line. On observation, the PICC line had a flesh-colored bandage wrapped around the base, obscuring the insertion site, and the external catheter had a purple open-ended hub labeled “5 ml” with no needleless connector/valve attached. During administration of IV cefepime, the LPN cleaned the open end of the external PICC with an alcohol swab, flushed with normal saline, and then attached the IV tubing directly to the open end of the PICC line without a needleless connector device. When questioned, the LPN stated that PICC lines she worked with never had valves and that this was how PICC lines are, despite reporting that she had IV therapy training and certification. Licensure review showed the LPN had been licensed less than a year and, per the Ohio Board of Nursing, IV certification is no longer listed on LPN licenses for those licensed after a certain date, making IV training and competency verification the employer’s responsibility. The Human Resource Director reported she did not maintain personnel files, licensure checks, or competency records for agency staff, and the interim DON reported having no education or competency documentation for the LPN other than IV training provided after the issue was identified, stating that the agency would have competency records. The Administrator reported that one staffing agency only verified licensure and did not check competencies, and that another agency provided only a self-assessment skills checklist on which the LPN rated her IV therapy skills as limited and requiring supervision. The facility’s contract with that agency specified that the facility was responsible for orientation, education, training, and competency of agency staff.
