Medication Administration Errors and Enteral Tube Procedure Failures
Summary
The facility failed to provide appropriate care and services to three residents with diabetes during fingerstick blood sugar (FSBS) testing. Resident 92, Resident 107, and Resident 63 each had physician orders for blood sugar monitoring, and Licensed Nurse 4 obtained FSBS readings for all three residents during medication administration. In each instance, the nurse cleaned the fingertip with an alcohol pad, punctured the fingertip with a lancet, and collected the blood sample without wiping away the first drop of blood before using the sample for the glucometer reading. During interview, Licensed Nurse 4 stated the first blood drop should have been wiped off before collecting the sample and acknowledged that not doing so could result in an inaccurate reading. The Infection Preventionist also stated that the initial sample should be wiped away and that collecting the second drop would help ensure an uncontaminated sample and more accurate blood glucose readings. The facility procedure for obtaining a fingerstick glucose level stated to discard the first drop of blood if alcohol is used to clean the fingertip because alcohol may alter the results. The facility also failed during medication administration for Resident 95, who had diagnoses including dysphagia, cerebral infarction, and attention to gastrostomy, and whose MDS indicated severe problems with thinking and memory and that the resident had a feeding tube. Licensed Nurse 5 prepared multiple crushed tablets, liquid medications, and capsule contents into separate medicine cups, diluted the solid medications with water, and brought the cups into the resident's room. The nurse then left the room to get a towel and left the medications unattended on the bedside table. Licensed Nurse 5 later confirmed the medications were left unattended and stated they should not have been left there. For Resident 95, the nurse also administered GT medications without first checking GT placement and without checking residual, despite physician orders to check GT placement before giving medications, feedings, and flushes and to check residual before feeding. Licensed Nurse 5 stated she did not check placement by auscultation or residual before administration and acknowledged the resident was at risk for medications going to the wrong place and aspiration. The DON stated nurses needed to check GT placement before administration, and the facility policy for enteral tube medication administration addressed safe and effective administration of medications via enteral tubes.
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