Failure to Complete Required Quarterly Self-Administration Medication Assessments
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to complete required quarterly assessments for a resident who was permitted to self-administer medications per the care plan and facility policy. Surveyors observed a tube of nystatin cream with a medication label on the bedside table of a resident with diagnoses including paraplegia and cognitive communication deficit; the resident stated she applied the cream herself and knew how to use it. The nystatin cream was again observed at the bedside on a subsequent day. The resident’s Quarterly MDS indicated she was cognitively intact but had limited range of motion in both upper and lower extremities. A prior Medication Self-Administer Review dated several months earlier documented that the resident was able to self-administer several oral supplements and a sleep aid unsupervised. Record review showed no additional self-administration assessments had been completed after the November assessment, despite a care plan initiated in early January stating the resident was able to administer medications to herself and directing staff to assess her for self-administration of medications quarterly. Physician’s orders included nystatin cream to be applied to the groin twice daily and as needed, and an order allowing the resident to self-administer medications brought to her by nursing staff, with the resident requesting pills be left in a cup at the bedside. During interview, the DON confirmed there were no other self-administration assessments completed. The facility’s Self-Administration of Medication policy required that medications be assessed for appropriateness and safety for self-administration and that the interdisciplinary team conduct reassessments quarterly and with any significant change in condition to ensure safe self-administration remained feasible.
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