Failure to Accurately Reconcile and Securely Manage Controlled Substances
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to maintain accurate records and secure handling of controlled substances on Unit 1, contrary to its own Controlled Substance/Narcotic Management Protocol. Policy required that with each administration, nurses document date, time, prior and post‑administration counts, and sign the controlled substance log; that any dose removed but not given be destroyed in the presence of another nurse; that all narcotics be counted and reconciled at the beginning of every shift by both oncoming and outgoing nurses with both signing; and that discrepancies be reported immediately. On the dates reviewed, the narcotic count sheets, individual controlled substance records, and actual on‑hand quantities did not match, and required two‑nurse shift counts were not consistently performed before narcotic keys were exchanged. For one resident receiving Vimpat (lacosamide) twice daily, the narcotic count record showed 940 mL remaining, while direct observation found only 850 mL on hand (one opened bottle at the 50 mL mark and two unopened 400 mL bottles). The LPN who signed the 8:00 AM administration documented using 20 mL and a remaining balance of 940 mL, and the MAR reflected that the dose was given, but the nurse later stated there were only 850 mL and could not explain why 940 mL was recorded. For another resident on Vimpat 10 mL twice daily, the LPN signed out 10 mL on the controlled substance record, leaving a documented balance of 120 mL, but also documented on the MAR that the morning dose was “poured but not given” because the resident did not wake up. A clear liquid in a 30 mL cup was found spilled in the locked narcotic compartment; the LPN identified it as that resident’s Vimpat, stated they had placed it there when the resident was not awake, and admitted they forgot it and did not discard it as required. For a resident with an as‑needed order for lorazepam 0.5 mg every six hours for anxiety, a blister pack with 26 tablets was observed, while the lorazepam administration record showed that one tablet had been signed out at 8:00 AM with a balance of 25 tablets. The MAR, however, contained no documentation that the resident actually received lorazepam that day. The LPN stated they signed out the lorazepam intending to administer it but did not give it because the resident was not having behaviors, and acknowledged they should not have signed it out on the count sheet. For a resident receiving scheduled gabapentin 300 mg twice daily, there were 55 tablets physically present (a full card of 30 in the medication room and a card of 25 in the cart), but the narcotic count record and controlled substance record documented a balance of 56 tablets after one tablet was signed out at 8:00 AM; the LPN stated they must have counted wrong when documenting the balance. For another resident prescribed hydrocodone‑acetaminophen 5‑325 mg three times daily, there were 66 tablets on hand (two full 30‑tablet cards and one card with six tablets), while the narcotic count record documented a 7:00 AM balance of 68 tablets. The controlled substance administration record showed the LPN signed out one tablet leaving a balance of 66 tablets, which did not reconcile with the earlier count sheet. The LPN reported that narcotics were supposed to be counted by two nurses and that the numbers on the count sheets should match the pills on hand, but stated that when they arrived that morning, the other LPN had already filled out and signed the narcotic count sheet and they then counted alone and co‑signed. The outgoing LPN confirmed that counts were supposed to be done by two nurses at shift change, admitted they had roughly estimated the Vimpat volume without glasses, acknowledged the count sheet should not have shown 940 mL when only about 850 mL were present, and stated they handed over the narcotic keys before completing a joint count because they were busy with a tube feeding. The unit manager and DON both stated that counts should be done by two nurses with both sheets and medications present, keys should not be exchanged until counts are verified, medications should be wasted if not immediately administered, and narcotics should be signed out at the time of actual administration, which did not occur in these instances.
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