Self-Administration Assessments Did Not Match Residents’ Current Medication Use
Summary
The facility failed to ensure residents were permitted to make choices regarding self-administration of medications and failed to ensure physician orders and care processes reflected residents’ current abilities or choices for 3 residents reviewed for self-administration of medications. The facility’s own policy stated residents had the right to self-administer medications, but required a nursing assessment, a medication-specific physician order, and inclusion of the self-administration plan in the care plan. In practice, the most current self-administration assessments for the residents reviewed were marked "No" and left the remaining sections blank, yet active orders and bedside access remained in place for some medications. For one resident with diagnoses including chronic respiratory failure with hypoxia, schizophrenia, COPD, dysphagia, parkinsonism, and oxygen dependence, the MDS identified intact cognition and oxygen therapy use. During observation, the resident was sitting in a recliner with a nebulizer treatment running while appearing to sleep, with the mask slumped away from the chin and no nursing staff present. The resident’s most current self-administration assessment indicated he did not self-administer medication, but an active physician order still stated it was okay to self-administer nebulizer treatments once set up by staff. The EMR banner did not show approval for self-administration, and there was no evidence the order had been clarified, discontinued, or revised. For another resident with Alzheimer’s disease, anxiety, depression, and COPD, an inhaler was observed on the bed within reach while the resident stated it was used as needed. The resident’s most current self-administration assessment also indicated she did not self-administer medication, and the EMR banner did not show approval to self-administer or keep the inhaler at bedside. However, an active order allowed levalbuterol inhalation aerosol to be kept at bedside. Staff stated they relied on the EMR banner to identify whether residents could self-administer medications, and the DON confirmed the assessment was not accurate. For the third resident, who had diagnoses including senile degeneration of the brain, chronic pain syndrome, COPD, and late-onset Alzheimer’s disease, the resident was observed requesting cough syrup and then returning to his room, where he kept albuterol inhaler, Bengay cream, and cortisone cream in a bedside drawer. The resident’s most current self-administration assessment marked that he did not self-administer medication, but a prior assessment had indicated he could self-administer the same medications. The resident’s BIMS score changed from cognitively intact to moderately cognitively impaired, yet the earlier assessment remained in use according to the DON until clarified later by the consulting RN, who stated the most current assessment invalidated the prior one and that the resident should have been reassessed.
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