Evening Medication Pass Not Completed for Multiple Residents on One Unit
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure that residents were free from significant medication errors when scheduled medications were not administered during a specific evening shift on the 3CD unit. Review of clinical records and March 2026 Medication Administration Records (MARs) for twenty residents showed that none of them received their ordered evening medications on 3/22/26. These residents had multiple serious diagnoses, including seizure disorders, atrial fibrillation, CHF, COPD, DM, liver disease, schizophrenia, depression, dementia, paraplegia, and malnutrition, and were prescribed a wide range of medications such as antiepileptics (Levetiracetam, Depakote, Lacosamide), anticoagulants (Eliquis, Apixaban), antihypertensives (Atenolol, Amlodipine, Metoprolol, Hydralazine, Propranolol, Clonidine, Carvedilol), insulin (Lantus), psychotropics (Risperidone, Quetiapine, Clozapine, Olanzapine, Ziprasidone), pain medications (Oxycodone, Tramadol, Gabapentin, Lyrica), GI medications (Protonix, Omeprazole, Famotidine, Lactulose), and other treatments including tube feedings (Jevity) and eye drops. The MARs documented that the scheduled evening doses for these medications were not administered on that date. The events leading to the missed medications centered on staffing and handoff failures during the 3–11 PM shift on the 3CD unit. LPN #6 was scheduled to work from 3–7 PM on 3/22/26 and was asked by the nursing supervisor, RN #7, to stay for the entire shift. LPN #6 reported that she informed RN #7 she could not stay the full shift but could stay a little longer. According to LPN #6, when she was preparing to leave between approximately 8:30–9:00 PM, she told RN #7 that she had not finished the medication pass and asked if she should stay until the oncoming nurse arrived. LPN #6 stated that RN #7 declined, instructed her to punch out, and told her that the oncoming nurse would complete the medication pass. LPN #6 indicated it was her understanding that another nurse was scheduled to take over the unit once she left. However, there was no nurse who actually assumed responsibility for completing the evening medication pass on the 3CD unit after LPN #6’s departure. Later that night, the 11 PM–7 AM charge nurse, LPN #8, who had been working another unit on the 3–11 PM shift, came to the 3CD unit and was informed by a night-shift nurse aide that several residents reported not receiving their evening medications. LPN #8 attempted to locate the previous evening nurse, found that LPN #6 had already left, and discovered that no one had come to cover the unit after LPN #6’s departure. LPN #8 then spoke with the residents who reported missing medications and contacted the supervisor, RN #7, who, according to LPN #8, initially suggested that the medications might simply not have been signed off. A facility medication error report dated 3/22/26 documented that one resident reported not receiving scheduled evening medications, and the facility’s subsequent review identified that potentially twenty-six residents on the 3CD unit had not received their evening medications that shift. The DON later stated there was no written medication administration policy beyond the general expectation that medications be given as ordered and that supervisors are responsible for ensuring medication passes are completed before a nurse ends a shift, and acknowledged conflicting accounts about whether LPN #6 had informed RN #7 that the medication pass was incomplete before leaving. The facility’s own policy titled “Medication Administration,” last revised 5/1/24, directed staff to follow written instructions from the prescriber and to adhere to the five rights of medication administration (right resident, right medication, right dose, right time, and right route). Despite this policy, the documented MARs for the twenty residents show that the ordered evening medications were not administered on the identified date. The combination of LPN #6 leaving before completing the medication pass, the lack of a nurse to assume responsibility for the 3CD unit for the remainder of the evening shift, and the failure of supervisory oversight to ensure completion of the medication pass directly led to the residents not receiving their scheduled medications during that shift.
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