Failure to Prevent Significant Medication Errors for Multiple Residents
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure residents were free from significant medication errors, affecting four residents reviewed for medication administration. One resident with cerebral infarction, left hemiplegia, mood disorder, HTN, and epilepsy was seen at Urgent Care for a widespread rash and excoriation, where Keflex and Diflucan were ordered for a fungal skin infection and candidal intertrigo. The resident returned to the facility with these new orders, but the medical record contained no documentation that Keflex was ever administered as ordered, which was confirmed by the DON. Another resident with DM, Down’s syndrome, Hirschsprung’s disease, morbid obesity, and an indwelling catheter had purulent and grey-green drainage from the catheter site and complained of pain with urination. A UA with reflex culture was ordered, and the culture later showed greater than 100,000 pseudomonas, with a handwritten physician order on the report for Bactrim DS twice daily for seven days. Review of the MAR for that month showed no documentation that Bactrim was administered, and the MDS nurse confirmed the antibiotic was not given as ordered for the urinary tract infection. A third resident with breast cancer, HTN, major depressive disorder, and osteoarthritis had an oncology order and prescription for Verzenio 150 mg PO twice daily for cancer treatment. The resident later told nursing staff she was supposed to be on a new oncology medication, and the oncology office was called with a message left, but there was no documented follow-up or clarification. Subsequent oncology documentation showed the resident still had not received Verzenio, and the drug was not ordered by the facility physician or administered until several weeks after the original prescription date. A fourth resident with acute and chronic respiratory failure with hypoxia, type 2 DM with hyperglycemia, and CKD stage 3 had insulin orders specifying administration only when blood sugar exceeded certain thresholds, yet insulin doses of 18 units and 2 units were administered on multiple dates when blood glucose values were below the ordered parameters. A nurse interview verified that insulin had been given outside the prescribed parameters.
Plan Of Correction
F760 Residents are Free of Significant Med Errors The PoC will what corrective action(s) will be accomplished for those residents found to have been affected by the deficient practice. Resident #51 is no longer in the facility. Resident # 10 received an order from a visit to urgent care, Keflex, that was never taken off and 3/18/26 the wound CNP stated to not take off the Keflex order but continue with Diflucan instead due to the diagnosis of fungal rash on 3/18/26. Resident #10 was assessed by the wound CNP, and the rash is improving per wound CNP on 4-7/26. Resident #3 has blood sugar parameters for insulin coverage the previous order was revised by ADON PA on 3/27/26. Resident assessed by MDS on 4-9-26-26 with blood sugars stable over the last month. Staff have been in-serviced, and audits support the resident is receiving correct doses of insulin. ADON reviewed and revised blood sugar orders 3/27/26 Resident #53 is no longer in the facility How you will identify other residents having the potential to be affected by the same deficient practice and what corrective action will be taken. All residents in the facility have the potential for the same practice. An audit of all orders on 3-19-26 ensures orders are correct and medication is in place. Parameters for glucose administration reviewed and revised 3/27.26 by ADON. A sweep of antibiotics prescribed was completed 3/25/26 with all having a diagnosis and stop date. This was completed by DON. What measures will be put into place or what systemic changes you will make to ensure that the deficient practice does not recur. DON/designee in serviced nursing staff to 1. Retrieve and review any orders from appointments 2. Monitor closely and follow parameters set for insulin coverage. 3. To medicate residents within the accepted standards of practice, applying state local and standard laws. also Nurses were in serviced on what a significant med error is and details of antibiotic stewardship including diagnosis to support the antibiotic. Completed 4/9/26 How the corrective action will be monitored to ensure the deficient practice will not recur. A daily audit is in place done by DON or designee began on 3/26/25 to review MARs to ensure insulin had not been administered outside parameters. an audit begun 3/31/26 to review orders received from all appointments are written per DON/designee, an audit began 3/31/26 to ensure a diagnosis is in place to support the antibiotic order per unit manager and an audit begun 3/31/26 to verify labs have written orders DON/designee. All audits listed are being done 5xaweek X 4 audits and will ensure diagnosis will support a diagnosis to support insulin administration, labs have orders in place, orders from appointments are taken offand insulin is given within parameters. weeks with oversight submitted to QAPI committee weekly. Concerns identified will be corrected and staff reeducated.
Penalty
Resources
Below are regulatory guidelines relevant to this citation:
Trusted data from CMS and state health departments
Every citation, penalty and Plan of Correction is sourced from public CMS records (latest release June 24, 2026) and official state health department websites — never guesswork.
Trusted by long-term care providers and associations.



