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F0580
D

Failure to Notify Physician and Improperly Holding Ordered Medications After Resident Status Change

Kent, Ohio Survey Completed on 03-12-2026

Penalty

No penalty information released
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The penalty, as released by CMS, applies to the entire inspection this citation is part of, covering all citations and f-tags issued, not just this specific f-tag. For the complete original report, please refer to the 'Details' section.

Summary

The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to timely notify the physician of a significant change in condition and failure to notify the physician when ordered medications, including insulin, were independently held. A resident with diagnoses including hypervolemia, orthostatic hypotension, hypertension, dehydration, acute kidney failure, type II diabetes, anxiety, and depression was admitted on 12/11/25 and had physician orders for Humulin insulin twice daily and blood glucose checks before meals and at bedtime, with instructions to notify the physician for blood glucose levels over 400 or under 70. On the morning of 12/18/25, the resident’s blood glucose was 240 at 7:30 A.M., but the ordered Humulin at 8:00 A.M. was not administered. Nurse documentation indicated the resident was lethargic, breathing heavily, and slow to respond, and that the physician was called and the nurse was waiting for a response, but there was no documentation of any physician order to hold medications, including insulin. Later that morning, the resident became unresponsive, with a blood pressure of 70/30, blood glucose of 182, and respirations of 30 per minute, and EMS was called after another attempt to contact the physician without a return call. The Medical Director stated he was not informed that medications were held and did not recall giving any order to hold the resident’s medications, including insulin, and clarified he would only hold fast-acting insulin, not long-acting insulin. A CMA reported being instructed by an LPN to hold insulin if the resident did not eat breakfast, and stated the resident was not awake that morning. The LPN confirmed instructing the CMA to hold insulin if the resident did not eat, based on nursing judgment, and reported sending a message to the physician without receiving a response. The DON stated the nurse called the physician and waited for a call back, and that the CMA held morning medications, including insulin, per nursing judgment. Facility policies required explanatory notes when regularly scheduled medications are withheld and prescriber notification when vital medications are withheld, and required immediate consultation with the physician and notification of the resident representative for significant changes or deterioration in health, which did not occur as required in this case.

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