Failure to Ensure Continuous Availability of Ordered Post‑Surgical Pain Medication
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure that ordered pain medication was consistently available for a resident following recent right knee replacement surgery and related complications. The resident was admitted with diagnoses including infection and inflammatory reaction due to an internal right knee prosthesis, aftercare following knee joint prosthesis, fracture of the right patella, depression, anxiety, heart failure, and seizures. The MDS documented that the resident was cognitively intact, had recent knee replacement surgery, and experienced frequent pain rated as high as 8/10, affecting sleep, therapy, and daily activities. The care plan identified chronic pain related to the right knee prosthesis and directed staff to administer analgesia per orders, including giving it 30 minutes before treatments or care. Another care plan focus addressed the resident’s frustration and anxiety about possibly going without medications, noting that an earlier incident had occurred when an orthopedic prescription was sent to the wrong pharmacy. From admission onward, there were repeated problems obtaining and maintaining the resident’s ordered oxycodone. On the night of admission, staff contacted the pharmacy for access to oxycodone from the emergency medication system, but the pharmacy reported it had not received the prescription. The DON documented calls to the pharmacy and the discharging hospital, learning that the order would need to come from the surgeon the next day. The resident complained of discomfort, refused PRN Tylenol stating it would not help compared to oxycodone, and ultimately requested transfer to the hospital when no oxycodone was available. Progress notes show that the pharmacy reported never receiving the script, no prescription was found in the admission paperwork, and the on‑call MD did not complete a verbal order despite multiple attempts. The resident became very upset, refused IV antibiotics due to pain, and was transported to the hospital. When he returned, staff again found no oxycodone script in the return paperwork, and the ADON documented that the resident was angry and demanding his pills. The ADON faxed the hospital script to the pharmacy but did not request a one‑time dose from the emergency supply because the resident was calling her names; the pharmacy then reported the script was incomplete due to a missing DEA number, preventing a one‑time dose. The resident’s MAR shows an oxycodone order starting on 3/27 and discontinued on 3/29, with a new order starting 3/31 and subsequent administrations documented into April. However, progress notes and staff interviews reveal multiple gaps when oxycodone was not available despite an active PRN order. On one occasion, all six tablets stocked in the emergency dispensing system were used, a refill request was submitted, and the pharmacy advised that the refill would be delivered the next morning; during this period, the resident was offered and accepted PRN Tylenol as an alternative. On another occasion, narcotic counts showed no oxycodone in the narcotic box, and chart review confirmed delays in refill and lack of restocking of the emergency dispensing system. The resident repeatedly requested pain medication, reported inability to walk due to pain, and was instead given Tylenol when oxycodone was unavailable. Staff, including the ADON and LPN, acknowledged that the resident had run out of oxycodone more than once, that it could take a while to get refills, and that the resident’s use of two tablets per dose contributed to running out quickly. The DON stated she was unsure if the pharmacy was available 24/7, and the NP stated she did not understand why the resident was running out, as she ordered a seven‑day supply each time and had observed an ongoing issue with ensuring pain medication availability. The facility’s own pain management policy stated its purpose was to deliver safe, individualized pain care and promote resident comfort, but the documented events show that the resident’s ordered pain medication was not consistently available, resulting in uncontrolled pain, restlessness, and anxiety. The deficiency is further illustrated by the resident’s own statements and staff observations. The resident reported that he went two to three days without pain medication upon admission and that the facility ran out of his pain medication every weekend, causing him to move less because of pain. Progress notes describe him as demanding his oxycodone, becoming red‑faced, shaking, and using profanity when it was not available, and refusing non‑opioid alternatives at times. Staff documented that he was frequently observed ambulating and participating in activities without obvious distress, and one LPN noted behavior suggestive of medication‑seeking; however, the same records confirm that when oxycodone was not available, staff could not administer it as ordered and instead relied on Tylenol and non‑pharmacologic measures. The NP explicitly stated that not getting pain medications as ordered could slow healing and contribute to anxiety and poor sleep. Overall, the facility did not ensure that the resident’s prescribed oxycodone was continuously available for administration as ordered, leading to periods of uncontrolled post‑surgical pain and associated restlessness and anxiety. The facility’s own documentation shows that the resident’s concern about going without medications was known and care‑planned, yet the underlying issue of ensuring timely, uninterrupted access to his ordered pain medication was not resolved. Pharmacy communication problems (scripts not received, incomplete DEA number, prior fill at another pharmacy, delays in restocking the emergency dispensing system), lack of timely physician orders or corrections, and staff decisions not to pursue one‑time emergency doses at certain points all contributed to repeated lapses in availability of oxycodone. These lapses occurred despite an active PRN order, ongoing pain assessments showing pain scores up to 10/10, and a care plan directing administration of analgesia per orders. As a result, the resident experienced episodes where his pain was not controlled and he became restless, anxious, and at times refused other treatments due to pain.
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