Significant Medication Error When Resident Receives Another Resident’s Heparin and Keppra
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure a resident was free from significant medication errors when one resident received another resident’s medications. Resident 2 had multiple serious diagnoses, including acute respiratory failure, tracheostomy with ventilator dependence, posthemorrhagic anemia, thrombocytopenia, chronic kidney disease stage 3B, and atrial fibrillation. Resident 2’s MAR for April 2026 showed daily antiplatelet therapy with aspirin 81 mg and clopidogrel 75 mg to prevent blood clots. Resident 2’s care plan documented that he was at risk for injury or complications related to anticoagulation/antiplatelet therapy, with a goal that he would not exhibit signs or symptoms of bleeding. On 4/1/26, Licensed Nurse 3 documented a change in condition note stating that Resident 2 was noted to have received medications intended for another resident, Resident 4, specifically heparin and levetiracetam (Keppra). LN 3 confirmed he administered a 5000-unit heparin injection subcutaneously into Resident 2’s abdomen and 750 mg of levetiracetam via G-tube. After leaving the room and checking the MAR, LN 3 realized he had been looking at Resident 4’s MAR and had given Resident 4’s medications to Resident 2. LN 3 stated he made the error because he did not follow the rights of medication administration, including right resident, right medication, right dose, right time, and right documentation. He further stated that Resident 4 did not have a photograph in the MAR and that he did not verify Resident 2’s identity by confirming his name or checking a wristband before administering the medications. Resident 4’s MAR showed orders for heparin 5000 units subcutaneously every 12 hours and levetiracetam oral solution 500 mg/mL, 7.5 mL via G-tube every 12 hours for encephalopathy and epilepsy. Facility policy titled “Administering Medications” required that medications be administered as prescribed, that the individual administering medications verify the resident’s identity by checking an identification band, checking a photograph attached to the medical record, or verifying with other personnel, and that the nurse check the label three times to ensure the right resident, medication, dosage, time, and route. The policy also stated that medications ordered for a particular resident may not be administered to another resident. The Director of Nursing confirmed that the medication error involving Resident 2 was reviewed and that it was determined the error could have been prevented if LN 3 had used safe medication administration practices and followed facility policy and procedures. Subsequently, Resident 2 reported being sent to the hospital about a week later for vomiting blood and indicated this had not happened to him before. On 4/6/26, LN 2 stated he was caring for Resident 2 when informed that Resident 2 was vomiting blood; he observed coffee-ground emesis, which he recognized as likely due to a GI bleed, and notified the nurse practitioner present in the facility. The NP confirmed he observed bloody vomit and blood on the floor next to the bed and ordered Resident 2 sent to the hospital for further evaluation, noting he was aware of the prior heparin medication error but was unsure if the vomiting blood was related. Hospital records documented a discharge diagnosis of coffee-ground emesis and noted hemoglobin around 8 g/dL with monitoring of hemoglobin and hematocrit. The Medical Director stated he was not aware that Resident 2 had received heparin and levetiracetam in error, confirmed the error should not have happened, and acknowledged that heparin is a high-alert medication, while indicating he did not believe the accidental heparin was the cause of the vomiting blood but could not be sure due to Resident 2’s other blood-thinning medications.
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