Glaucoma Eye Drops Inappropriately Held Without Orders, Leading to Prolonged Missed Doses
Summary
The deficiency involves a resident with bilateral primary open-angle glaucoma whose prescribed glaucoma eye drops were placed on hold without a physician’s order, resulting in numerous missed doses over an extended period. The resident, an older female with severe stage bilateral glaucoma and moderately impaired vision, had active diagnoses of unspecified open-angle glaucoma and used corrective lenses. Her care plan included administration of glaucoma medications (Latanoprost 0.005% once daily and Dorzolamide 2% twice daily) as ordered to relieve or minimize ocular pressure. During a night-shift medication cart audit, an ADON identified that the resident’s glaucoma eye drops were expired, removed them from the cart, and unilaterally placed both medications on hold in the electronic MAR without obtaining a physician’s order, documenting that the medications were on hold pending refill from hospice pharmacy. Following this action, the resident’s Latanoprost was on hold for a period during which 25 doses were missed, and Dorzolamide was on hold for a longer period during which 47 doses were missed. Multiple nurses, including LVNs and the weekend RN supervisor, reported that they were told by the ADON that the medications were on hold due to expiration and pending delivery, and they assumed that appropriate physician orders and notifications had been obtained because the ADON had executed the hold. The hold orders were entered without a stop date, and there was no documentation that the physician, NP, hospice, pharmacy, or the resident’s family had been notified at the time the medications were placed on hold. Staff interviews indicated that the eye drops’ unavailability and hold status were mentioned intermittently in morning clinical meetings and 24-hour reports, but there was no effective follow-through to secure replacement medications or clarify orders, and the medications remained on hold for nearly a month. The resident herself noticed that she was not receiving her usual glaucoma eye drops and reported this to her family member. The family member later contacted facility staff and hospice, expressing concern about the interruption in therapy and lack of communication. Subsequent review of records and interviews confirmed that hospice did not cover the glaucoma medications and had not been previously notified of any change, that the facility pharmacy had delivered Dorzolamide earlier than staff realized, and that Latanoprost had not been requested for refill for an extended period. The physician and MD later reported they had not been notified when the medications were placed on hold, and the ophthalmology office confirmed the resident’s glaucoma was severe and that the prescribed drops were intended to keep intraocular pressure down and prevent further optic nerve damage. The facility’s internal investigation and staff statements consistently showed that the ADON placed the medications on hold without a physician’s order, failed to follow up to ensure timely reordering and delivery, and that floor nurses relied on the ADON’s actions and did not independently obtain orders or restart the medications, resulting in the resident missing a significant number of prescribed glaucoma medication doses. Additional interviews with the Interim DON, Clinical Services Director, pharmacy consultant, hospice nurse, and other staff further detailed the sequence of inactions that led to the prolonged interruption of therapy. The Interim DON and CSD stated that any medication placed on hold should have an associated physician order, with clear start/stop parameters, and should be tracked via reports and discussed in clinical meetings until resolved. They reported that in this case, the hold orders for the glaucoma drops lacked a physician order and stop date, and the issue was not consistently or effectively addressed in daily clinical oversight. The hospice nurse reported learning of the discontinuation only after a family call and stated that the ADON acknowledged placing the drops on hold and forgetting to follow up. The MD and pharmacy consultant explained that failure to receive glaucoma medications could allow intraocular pressure to increase and glaucoma to progress, and the ophthalmology assistant emphasized that once vision loss occurs from glaucoma, it is permanent. Collectively, the documentation and interviews show that the resident was not kept free from significant medication errors because her essential glaucoma medications were inappropriately held without medical authorization and without timely follow-up, leading to a prolonged period in which she did not receive the prescribed therapy. Throughout this period, multiple staff members, including LVNs, the weekend RN supervisor, and a medication aide, were aware that the eye drops were on hold and unavailable, but they either believed the ADON had already obtained necessary orders or lacked authority to change the hold status. The resident’s family member and hospice nurse ultimately brought the issue to higher-level attention after discovering that the resident had gone without her glaucoma medications for nearly a month. Interviews with the Administrator and Interim DON confirmed that they were not promptly informed when the family first raised concerns over a weekend, and that the ADON, who was responsible for pharmacy systems and medication availability, did not ensure that the medications were reordered, delivered, and restarted. As a result, the resident missed dozens of doses of both Latanoprost and Dorzolamide, contrary to her care plan and physician’s original orders, constituting a significant medication error. The report also documents that the resident did not report pain, blurry vision, or noticeable vision loss during the period without eye drops, and that she continued to use glasses for near and far vision. However, clinical experts interviewed in the report noted that glaucoma is often asymptomatic, that increased intraocular pressure is not felt by the patient, and that progression of glaucoma and associated vision loss can occur over time without obvious symptoms. The facility’s own clinical leadership and external consultants characterized the interruption of glaucoma therapy as a serious concern, and the Clinical Services Director stated she would consider the situation a form of neglect. The deficiency is therefore based on the facility’s failure to ensure that the resident was free from significant medication errors by allowing her prescribed glaucoma medications to be held without proper authorization or follow-up, resulting in a prolonged lapse in treatment.
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