Failure to Follow Stat Kit Policy for Emergency Controlled Pain Medication
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to follow its own policy for obtaining emergency controlled medications from the electronic first-dose (stat) kit, resulting in a newly admitted resident not receiving ordered narcotic pain medication. The resident was admitted with multiple traumatic injuries, including fractures of the thoracic vertebrae, ribs, pelvis, sacrum, and left humerus, as well as traumatic pneumothorax, bilateral lung contusions, liver and spleen lacerations, and hemoperitoneum. Hospital discharge documentation listed outpatient and after-visit medications that included scheduled Percocet 5-325 mg three times daily and ibuprofen 800 mg every 8 hours as needed for pain. The facility’s admission orders reflected ibuprofen 800 mg every 8 hours PRN and Percocet 5-325 mg every 8 hours PRN for pain, but there was no documentation of Percocet being administered after admission. On the evening and night following admission, the DON documented that the resident complained of pain and was given ibuprofen 800 mg around 11:06 p.m., which was recorded as ineffective in controlling the resident’s pain. The DON also documented that the hospital had not sent written prescriptions (“hard scripts”) for the narcotic pain medication and that the pharmacy reported it had not received those prescriptions. The DON contacted the hospital regarding the missing prescriptions and was awaiting a call back. The DON noted that the resident was informed that the narcotic prescriptions had not been received and that only ibuprofen could be given at that time. The resident remained awake, complained of pain and inability to sleep, and later called 911 requesting transport to the hospital. The facility’s pharmacist later confirmed that the facility contacted the after-hours pharmacy service and was informed that, with a written prescription, Percocet could be sent STAT from a local pharmacy and that the correct dose of Percocet was available in the emergency kit, which also required an order to access. The facility’s Stat Safe Policy and Procedure stated that if a controlled substance is needed, facility staff should contact the pharmacy/after-hours service to retrieve an access code to remove doses from the electronic first-dose kit. The DON stated she was not aware that obtaining a verbal order from a provider to access the emergency kit was an option and acknowledged she did not contact a provider when she first realized the resident had arrived without narcotic prescriptions, citing that there was a lot going on that night. The medical director stated that, had he been contacted sooner, he could have given a verbal order to access the emergency kit or ordered transfer to the ER. During the subsequent ER visit, the resident reported that no pain medication had been administered between arrival at the facility and arrival at the ER, and the ER documentation noted the resident presented for pain management and opioid withdrawal symptoms and was given Percocet 5-325 mg. The sequence of events shows that despite having a policy and an emergency kit process in place for controlled substances, the facility did not obtain the necessary order or access code to retrieve Percocet from the emergency kit for this resident. The DON relied solely on ibuprofen, which was documented as ineffective, and on attempts to obtain written prescriptions from the hospital, without promptly escalating to a provider for a verbal order to access the emergency kit as allowed by policy and pharmacy procedure. The pharmacist later clarified that an emergency verbal order from a provider would have allowed the facility to obtain a code to access the emergency kit for the resident’s pain medication. This failure to follow the Stat Safe Policy and Procedure and to secure timely access to ordered controlled pain medication for the resident with significant traumatic injuries formed the basis of the cited deficiency in pharmaceutical services.
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