Unnecessary psychotropic medication management failures
Summary
The facility failed to ensure residents were free from unnecessary psychotropic medications by not maintaining required PRN stop dates, not documenting gradual dose reductions (GDRs), not obtaining or monitoring laboratory testing as indicated, and not monitoring for adverse consequences for multiple residents reviewed for unnecessary medications. The report identified deficiencies involving residents R11, R23, R27, and R29, each of whom had diagnoses and medication regimens involving psychotropic drugs, including antipsychotics and anxiolytics. For R27, the record showed a PRN lorazepam order initiated on 2/23/26 for anxiety, but the EMR lacked evidence of a 14-day stop date, discontinuation, renewal, or clinical re-evaluation after 14 days. The psychoactive medication review marked GDR as not applicable and stated reduction was contraindicated, yet the EMR lacked documentation supporting a GDR discussion or clinical rationale on 2/23/26. Staff interviews confirmed the PRN lorazepam order did not include an end date, and the consultant pharmacist stated PRN psychotropic medications should have a 14-day duration with provider documentation to support continued use beyond that timeframe. The DON and consultant nurse also acknowledged there was no documented evidence that GDRs had been completed for R27. For R29, the admission record and MDS showed severe cognitive impairment and dependence for all ADLs, with diagnoses including Alzheimer’s disease, dementia, psychotic disturbance, mood disturbance, and anxiety. The physician orders included scheduled haloperidol three times daily, PRN haloperidol every hour as needed, and PRN lorazepam for agitation. The psychoactive medication review documented only the PRN lorazepam and did not include the scheduled haloperidol or PRN haloperidol. The consultant pharmacist noted the PRN lorazepam required a 14-day stop date and recommended target behavior and side effect monitoring, while the DON stated staff should have documented the 14-day stop date when the first dose was given and updated the primary physician. For R23, the MDS identified severe cognitive impairment and use of an antipsychotic medication, with diagnoses including bipolar disorder, anxiety, major depression dementia, and Lewy body neurocognitive disorder. The resident was prescribed aripiprazole, olanzapine, and venlafaxine, but the EMR lacked evidence of other monitoring labs while antipsychotics were prescribed. The consultant pharmacist’s medication regimen reviews from October 2024 through March 2026 noted no significant irregularities and did not direct lab monitoring. The DON stated CBC and LFTs would be expected at least yearly and after medication changes, but could not locate those labs in the record. For R11, the record showed a PRN lorazepam order for anxiety prior to dental work that lacked an end date and extended beyond the 14-day period allowed for PRN psychotropic medication. The provider note described anxiety and resistance during dental procedures and initiated lorazepam, but did not specify an end date. The care plan noted oral and dental problems, poor nutrition, poor oral hygiene, and a history of refusing dental care, with sedation recommended by the dentist. The ADON acknowledged the medication was time specific for dental work but stated a follow-up review date was not identified.
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