Failure to Timely Administer and Document Medications and to Provide Medications for a New Admission
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure medications were ordered, administered, and documented in accordance with professional standards and facility policy. For 12 residents, medication administration records (MARs) and Medication Admin Audit Reports dated 4/22/26 showed that multiple scheduled morning medications on 4/08/26 were documented as given several hours after their scheduled times. Examples include medications due at 7:00am, 8:00am, and 9:00am being recorded as administered between late morning and late afternoon, with delays ranging from approximately 1.5 hours to over 8 hours. The medications involved included, among others, Docusate Sodium, Hydroxyzine, Levetiracetam, Furosemide, Loratadine, Gabapentin, Aspirin, calcium supplements, Nabumetone, Polyethylene Glycol, Magnesium Oxide, Eliquis, Memantine, Sucralfate, Amlodipine, Losartan, Carvedilol, Plavix, Tizanidine, Famotidine, Pyridoxine, Thiamine, Dapagliflozin, Protonix, Lexapro, Hydralazine, Ferrous Sulfate, Metformin, Baclofen, multivitamins, Cholecalciferol, Enalapril, Coreg, Lasix, Depakote, Duloxetine, and Centrum. On interview, the RN assigned to these residents for the 7:00am–3:00pm shift on 4/08/26 acknowledged responsibility for administering their medications. The RN stated a belief that the medications had been given on time but admitted to signing them out on the MAR later than when they were actually administered, explaining that it was the first day off orientation and the focus had been on getting all medications passed out on time. The RN also acknowledged that the expectation is to sign off medications immediately after administration. The facility’s Medication Administration policy, dated 2/2026, requires staff to verify the right medication, dose, route, resident, and time, to verify that medications are administered at the proper time, and to document each medication on the MAR as it is prepared and given, including remaining with the resident to ensure the medication is swallowed and documenting reasons if a medication is not given as ordered. A separate deficiency involved a newly admitted resident who did not receive ordered medications on the day of admission. This resident, with a history including COPD, hypokalemia, alcohol abuse with withdrawal, rheumatoid arthritis, hypothyroidism, and other conditions, was admitted alert and oriented and able to communicate needs. The resident and her daughter reported that no medications were received from the time of admission in the afternoon until the following morning, including anxiety medication and breathing treatments, and that the resident was upset and awake all night while the nurse reportedly stated she was working on the medications. Review of the MAR showed that several medications, including Mirtazapine scheduled at 2100, Ativan every 8 hours for anxiety, Ipratropium-albuterol for wheezing, Lomotil for diarrhea, and Albuterol inhaler as needed for wheezing, were not signed out as given on the admission date. Staff interviews and document review showed that the admission paperwork, including the medication list and five prescriptions, was brought in by the resident’s daughter and given to the admissions staff, scanned into the system, but not promptly forwarded to the nursing unit. The Admissions Director stated that the documents were scanned and that there was a delay before they were provided to nursing when requested. The DON stated that for new admissions, the nurse is supposed to send the medication list to the pharmacy after verifying medications with the physician and clarifying the expected time of arrival, and if medications do not arrive on time, the nurse is to obtain medications from the emergency box. The emergency medication list included Ativan, Ipratropium-albuterol, and Albuterol inhaler, which were among the resident’s ordered medications. The facility was unable to provide a policy on ordering medications for new admissions, and attempts by the surveyor to contact the afternoon and night shift nurses assigned to the resident on the admission date were unsuccessful.
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.



