Failure to Ensure Timely and Complete Medication Administration for Two Residents
Penalty
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure residents were free from significant medication errors, specifically repeated late and omitted medication administrations for two residents with intact cognition and multiple chronic conditions. One resident reported frequently receiving medications up to three hours after scheduled times and described a day when all medications were delayed until early afternoon. This resident, admitted with diagnoses including schizophrenia, type 2 diabetes mellitus, peripheral vascular disease, and other conditions, stated he receives Gabapentin for bilateral lower leg pain and reported experiencing pain at a level of eight out of ten when his Gabapentin was delayed. A registered nurse confirmed that on one day she was the only nurse on the unit due to another nurse calling off, and that she administered this resident’s 9:00 AM Gabapentin dose at approximately 11:15 AM, outside the facility’s stated 8:00–10:00 AM window for 9:00 AM medications. Record review for this resident’s physician orders, MARs, and medication audit reports showed multiple instances of late administration of respiratory and pain medications. On several dates, Advair inhaler doses ordered for 9:00 AM and 6:00 PM were given hours late, including a 6:00 PM dose administered at 10:50 PM. Albuterol tablets ordered three times daily were repeatedly given several hours after the ordered times, such as a 9:00 AM dose given at 12:06 PM and a 1:00 PM dose given at 4:19 PM. Gabapentin 600 mg ordered three times daily for neuropathy was also administered late on multiple occasions, including a 9:00 AM dose given at 12:13 PM, a 1:00 PM dose given at 4:19 PM, and doses ordered for 11:00 AM and 4:00 PM given in the mid-afternoon and late evening. The nurse practitioner stated that medications not given within one hour before or after the ordered time are considered late and not following the doctor’s order, and that pain medications not given as ordered could result in residents being uncomfortable and having mobility affected. A second resident, admitted with diagnoses including COPD, sleep apnea, hypertensive heart disease with heart failure, heart failure, type 2 diabetes mellitus, and rheumatoid arthritis, also experienced medication administration issues. During observation, an LPN who had arrived late for her shift stated that none of the medications on her set had been passed yet and acknowledged she would not be able to complete all 9:00 AM medications within the 8:00–10:00 AM window. During a medication pass, the LPN prepared and administered multiple oral medications and an inhaler to this resident but stated that Empagliflozin (Jardiance) and Gabapentin were not available and therefore were not given. The resident, alert and oriented, reported not receiving her ordered 6:00 AM lidocaine pain patch to the left shoulder and rated her shoulder pain as eight out of ten; observation confirmed there was no pain patch in place. Review of this resident’s MAR and physician orders showed scheduled medications including a daily lidocaine patch at 6:00 AM, Bactrim DS twice daily for UTI, Hydroxychloroquine, Metformin, Symbicort inhaler twice daily, and Gabapentin three times daily for pain. The DON and nursing staff stated that medications are expected to be given within one hour before or after the ordered time, that late administration beyond this window is considered not following the doctor’s order, and that pain, hypertensive, diabetic, and antibiotic medications must be given timely as ordered. The facility’s policy on administration procedures for all medications, dated 10/25/14, states that medications are to be administered in a safe and effective manner, with review of the five rights and checking the MAR for orders. Despite this policy, the documented late administrations, missed doses due to unavailability, and failure to apply an ordered pain patch demonstrate that the facility did not consistently follow ordered times and the five rights of medication administration for these residents. Staff interviews, resident statements, and medication records collectively show that the facility did not ensure residents were free from significant medication errors related to timing and omission of ordered medications.
