Failure to Conduct and Act on Monthly Pharmacist Drug Regimen Reviews
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure that a licensed pharmacist conducted and documented monthly drug regimen reviews (DRRs) for multiple residents and the facility’s failure to respond to pharmacist-identified irregularities according to established policies and procedures. For several residents, surveyors found no documentation in the clinical record of monthly pharmacist reviews or of the facility’s response to any identified irregularities. The Director of Nursing (DON) repeatedly stated that she did not know where the monthly DRRs were located, did not have them, and that the facility was unable to provide this information during the survey period. For one resident with diagnoses including a right femur neck fracture, alcoholic cirrhosis, hypertension, and depression, the quarterly MDS showed moderately impaired cognition. Review of this resident’s clinical record from late April revealed no documentation of the facility responding to irregularities identified by the pharmacist during monthly DRRs. When interviewed, the DON stated she did not know where the monthly DRRs were and could not provide them, and no additional information was produced by the end of the survey. Another resident with type 2 diabetes, chronic kidney disease, muscle weakness, and hypertension, and with severely impaired cognition per the admission MDS, also had no documented facility response to pharmacist-identified irregularities in the progress notes, and the DON again reported that the monthly DRRs could not be located or provided. For two additional residents, one with a stroke and aphasia and another with cataracts and anxiety, surveyors found that no monthly pharmacy reviews were documented in their clinical records over a 12‑month period. In the first of these cases, the resident had severely impaired cognition and active orders for PRN lorazepam via G‑tube and multiple PRN morphine doses for varying levels of pain or distress, which were frequently administered without documented pharmacy reviews or recommendations. The last pharmacy review in this resident’s record was dated more than a year earlier, and the last recommendation several months earlier. For the resident with cataracts and anxiety, no monthly pharmacy reviews were documented for the same 12‑month period, with the last review and recommendation both dated in the prior year. The DON acknowledged that she had only recently started a pharmacy review and recommendation binder and could not provide further information. The facility also failed to implement and follow policies and procedures for responding to pharmacist-identified irregularities, including those requiring urgent action, for two other residents. One resident with severe cognitive impairment and multiple psychiatric and neurologic diagnoses, including non‑Alzheimer’s dementia, seizure disorder, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, and psychotic disorder, had no documentation in the progress notes of the facility responding to irregularities identified by the pharmacist during monthly DRRs. Another resident with extensive medical conditions, including chronic respiratory failure with hypoxia, diabetes with autonomic polyneuropathy, lymphedema, cirrhosis, NASH, hepatic fibrosis, COPD, morbid obesity, ventral hernia with obstruction, gastroparesis, panic disorder, chronic kidney disease, major depressive disorder, and anxiety disorder, similarly had no documentation of facility responses to pharmacist-identified irregularities. In both cases, the DON stated she did not have a process for responding to pharmacist-identified irregularities and had not developed a system since beginning employment, and the facility was unable to provide the missing DRRs or additional information before the survey concluded.
Penalty
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