Psychotropic Medications Not Properly Monitored or Linked to Target Behaviors
Summary
The facility failed to ensure psychotropic medications were regularly monitored and documented, including the interventions used, for five sampled residents reviewed for unnecessary medications. Surveyors found that the residents’ records did not consistently identify which target behaviors were associated with each psychotropic medication, and in several cases the behavior monitoring tools used by staff were generic rather than tied to a specific medication or diagnosis. For Resident 6, the record showed orders for alprazolam as needed, duloxetine, and escitalopram, with a care plan for impaired psychosocial well-being that listed behaviors such as anxiety, panic, self-isolation, and refusal of care. However, the care plan did not identify which psychotropic medications the resident was receiving or which target behaviors each medication was intended to treat. The MAR and TAR did not direct nurses to monitor target behaviors for these medications, and the CNA behavior monitor listed many possible behaviors without identifying which were specific to this resident or linked to a particular medication. The resident’s as-needed alprazolam was extended multiple times, but the record did not show provider-documented clinical rationale for each extension, and the February MAR did not identify non-pharmacological interventions to try before administration; the medication was given 23 times that month. For Resident 50, the record showed orders for aripiprazole for psychosis and escitalopram for depression. The psychoactive drug consent left blank the sections for non-pharmacological interventions in use before medication, benefits of medication use, and indication for use or target behaviors. The care plan stated the resident would be monitored for 30 days to establish target behaviors, triggers, and interventions, but it did not identify which medications were being used or what behaviors they were intended to treat. The March MAR did not show target behaviors being monitored, and the behavior monitor used was the same prefabricated form used for Resident 6, without distinguishing which behaviors were targeted by which medication. For Resident 9, the record showed orders for Seroquel for PTSD and venlafaxine for major depressive disorder, but there were no behavior monitors ordered for licensed nursing staff to document behaviors related to either medication. The CNA behavior documentation only included an area for sad/tearful, without identifying which medication or diagnosis that behavior related to. For Resident 45, the record showed trazodone for sleeplessness and prior psychotropic use, but the care plan listed multiple behaviors such as agitation, anger, cursing, hitting, and racial slurs without distinguishing which behaviors were being treated by which medication. For Resident 7, the record showed aripiprazole and venlafaxine for major depressive disorder, but staff described the behavior documentation as the same as used for other residents and not specific to this resident; staff also stated they would only document behaviors in a progress note if they were noteworthy or if the resident was on alert.
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