Medication Error Leads to Resident's Death
Summary
The facility failed to ensure that a resident was free from significant medication errors, resulting in the death of the resident. On the morning of the incident, an LPN administered another resident's medications, including Methadone and likely Hydromorphone, to a resident who was not prescribed these medications. The LPN did not report the medication error, and as a result, no medical intervention was initiated. The resident was later found unresponsive in a common area and was pronounced deceased after resuscitative measures were unsuccessful. The resident involved had a medical history that included cerebral palsy, developmental disorder of speech and language, and cognitive deficits. The resident was dependent on staff for various activities and had a care plan that included administering medications as ordered. The resident's medication administration record indicated that the prescribed medications were documented as administered, but the error involving the administration of another resident's medications was not reported or documented. The incident was compounded by the LPN's failure to report the error immediately, which delayed any potential medical intervention. The facility's investigation revealed that the LPN initially confessed to the error to another nurse but later denied it during the facility's investigation. The resident's postmortem blood work confirmed the presence of Methadone and opiates, which were not prescribed to the resident, indicating the occurrence of the medication error.
Removal Plan
- LPN #381 was suspended pending investigation and subsequently terminated for failure to cooperate with the facility investigation.
- All staff who were working at the time of the alleged incident and the following shift were interviewed by the Administrator and RRN #408.
- UM #332 and UM #400 were suspended pending further investigation and provided with one-on-one education on reporting medication errors, medication administration, abuse/neglect procedures, and immediate reporting protocol to the abuse coordinator.
- An in-house audit was completed by the DON, ADON, and RRN #408 for all residents receiving narcotics to ensure that medication was being received as ordered.
- Audits of all narcotics on each medication cart were completed to ensure all narcotics were accounted for.
- A new protocol was implemented for all zeroed narcotic sheets to stay in the narcotic book until removed by unit manager and/or DON, and all empty narcotic cards were to stay in narcotic drawer until removed by unit manager and/or DON.
- Nurses were in-serviced on medication administration, abuse and neglect-with protocol to report allegations directly to abuse coordinator, shift to shift count of narcotics, destruction of narcotics, change of condition with notification to physician and family, discontinued home medications would be verified by manager and nurse, medication errors and reporting.
- Nurses completed a medication administration competency.
- Alert signs with reporting requirements including the telephone number for the Administrator were placed at nurse's stations, time clock, and break room.
- A Self-Reported Incident was submitted to the State agency involving Resident #117.
- The facility implemented a plan for the DON/designee to audit narcotic medications to ensure the narcotic counts were correct.
- The facility implemented a plan for the DON/designee to ensure medication administration compliance by observing medication administration with two nurses.
- The facility implemented a plan to ensure compliance with the zeroed narcotic control sheets by collecting empty narcotic cards with narcotic sheets from the medication carts.
- The facility implemented a plan for the DON/Designee to ensure compliance of reporting medication errors by interviewing two nurses.
- All negative findings to be reviewed during Quality Assurance Performance Improvement (QAPI) meetings to determine if additional audits were necessary.
Penalty
Resources
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