15.1
CHAPTER 15
F425 - PHARMACY SERVICES
THE MEDICATION AUDIT TRAIL
(ORDERING, RECEIVING AND
DISPOSITION OF MEDICATION)
15.2
NURSING HOME
THE PRESCRIPTION AUDIT TRAIL
I. Regulatory Overview
STATE
59A-4.112 Florida Nursing Home Regulations involving Pharmacy Services
1) The facility shall adopt procedures that assure the accurate acquiring, receiving,
dispensing, and administering of all drugs and biologicals, to meet the needs of each
resident.
2) The consultant pharmacist shall establish a system to accurately record the receipt and
disposition of all controlled drugs in sufficient detail to enable an accurate
reconciliation.
3) The pharmacist shall determine that drug records are in order and that an account of all
controlled drugs is maintained and periodically reconciled.
4) All controlled substances shall be disposed of in accordance with State and federal laws.
All non-controlled substances may be destroyed in accordance with the facility’s
policies and procedures. Records of the disposition of all substances shall be maintained
in sufficient detail to enable an accurate reconciliation.
FEDERAL
F425 (Rev. 9/20/2006)
§483.60 Pharmacy Services (Complete regulation available in Section II of this manual)
The facility must provide routine and emergency drugs and biologicals to its residents, or
obtain them under an agreement described in §483.75(h) of this part. permits, but only under
the general supervision of a licensed nurse.
(a) Procedures. A facility must provide pharmaceutical services (including procedures that
assure the accurate acquiring, receiving, dispensing, and administering of all drugs and
biologicals) to meet the needs of each resident.
(b) Service Consultation. The facility must employ or obtain the services of a licensed pharmacist who--
(1) Provides consultation on all aspects of the provision of pharmacy services in the facility;
(2) Establishes a system of records of receipt and disposition of all controlled drugs in sufficient detail to enable an accurate reconciliation; and
(3) Determines that drug records are in order and that an account of all controlled drugs is maintained and periodically reconciled.
15.3
NURSING HOME
II. THE AUDIT TRAIL CONSISTS OF:
1) Records that show when medications were ordered.
a. Telephone Orders
b. Physician Orders (ex RX from outside prescriber)
c. Refill order sheets
d. copies of faxes at the Pharmacy
2) Delivery of Medication
a. documentation should show which nurse received the medication
b. copies of delivery documents (i.e. delivery logs or delivery manifests) should be
retained by the facility and the vendor Pharmacy
3) Administration of Medication
Doses administered are recorded on the facility’s medical records forms including:
a. the MAR (Medication Administration Record)
b. the PRN Sheet
c. the Treatment Sheet
4) Disposition of Medication
a. Documentation showing drug was destroyed in the facility (non-controls can be
destroyed on the nursing unit)
b. Documentation of controlled substances destruction showing disposition by the
Consultant Pharmacist, the D.O.N. and the Administrator or their designee
c. Documentation of medications released with a patient when they are discharged
d. Documentation of medications returned to the Pharmacy for credit.
III. THE GOAL OF THE AUDIT TRAIL
The audit trail should allow the Consultant Pharmacist to track a medication throughout the
Facility.
EX. 30 doses of Percocet ordered and delivered on 4/1/2007 by vendor pharmacy
Received by Nurse L. Smith LPN on 4/1/2007 3pm
MAR indicates 15 doses were administered between 4/1/2007 and 4/20/2007 (per
MAR)
15 doses sent to the DON for destruction on 4/20/2007
15 doses actually destroyed by the Consultant Pharmacist on 5/30/2007
audit shows all doses are accounted for
15.4
NURSING HOME
Medication Orders in the Nursing Home
1. Who can prescribe in the nursing home?
Anyone who can prescribe in Florida can also prescribe in the nursing home
2. Identify prescribers who are problematic in the nursing home?
(1) Physician Assistants – Consultant must look at how P.A. orders are approved by
their Physician
(2) ARNP’s – prescribing or altering doses of controlled substance
15.5
NURSING HOME
3. What is the process for ordering medications for a new admission?
a. Hospital transfer
b. Transfer from another facility
c. Transfer from resident’s home
4. The use of Telephone Orders vs In-house Orders
5. What is the process for transferring orders from Nursing to Pharmacy personnel?
a. via phone
b. via fax
6. Compare the new order process in the Nursing Home vs an ALF
7. What makes an order “legal” in the nursing home?
a. Specific Frequency (1 tab q4h)
b. Route of administration
c. Duration of therapy
d. PRN orders must have reason for use
8. The standard of practice requires the primary physician for each resident to renew orders
every 30 days.
a. Physician Order Sheet – signed and dated every 30 days.
Federal Indicators and state regulations do not require this process.
9. No medications can be administered without an order
15.6
NURSING HOME
FEDERAL PHYSICIAN REQUIREMENTS
F333 – Prescriber’s Orders –
The latest recapitulation of drug orders is sufficient for determining whether a valid
order exists provided the prescriber has signed the “recap” The signed “recap”, if the
facility uses the “recap” system, and subsequent orders constitute a legal authorization to
administer the drug.
F386 – Physician’s visits – The Physician must:
1) review the resident’s total program of care, including medications and treatments,
at each visit required by paragraph © of this section;
2) write, sign and date progress notes at each visit and
3) sign and date all orders
Under Guidance to surveyor: “There is no requirement for physician renewal of
orders”
F387 - Frequency of Physician visits
1) The resident must be seen by a physician at least once every 30 days for the first 90 days
after admission, and at least once every 60 days thereafter
2) A physician visit is considered timely if it occurs not later than 10 days after the date the visit
was required
F388 – At the option of the physician, required visits in SNF’s, after the initial visit, may
alternate between personal visits by the physician and visits by a physician assistant, nurse
practitioner or clinical nurse specialist in accordance with paragraph (e) of this section
15.7
REVISED FLORIDA PHARMACY REGULATIONS
64B16-27.1003 Transmission of Prescription Orders. Prescriptions may be transmitted from prescriber to
dispenser in written form or by any means of communication. Prescriptions may be transmitted by facsimile
systems as provided in Section 465.035, F.S., and federal law. Any direct transmission of prescriptions, including
verbal, facsimile, telephonic or electronic data transmission, shall only be with the approval of the patient or
patient’s agent. The pharmacist receiving any such transmitted prescription shall not participate in any system that
the pharmacist knows or should have reason to know restricts the patient’s choice of pharmacy. The pharmacist
shall take such measures necessary to ensure the validity of all prescriptions received. Specific Authority 465.005,
465.0155, 465.022 FS. Law Implemented 465.022, 465.026, 893.07 FS. History–New 11-18-07.
64B16-27.103 Oral Prescriptions and Copies. (1) Only a pharmacist or registered pharmacy intern acting under the supervision of a pharmacist may, in the State
of Florida, accept an oral prescription of any nature.
(2) Only a pharmacist or registered pharmacy intern acting under the supervision of a pharmacist may, in the State
of Florida, prepare a copy of a prescription or read a prescription to any person for purposes of providing reference
concerning treatment of the person or animal for whom the prescription was written, and when said copy is given a
notation shall be made upon the prescription that a copy has been given, the date given, and to whom given.
Specific Authority 465.005, 465.0155, 465.014, 465.022 FS. Law Implemented 465.003(13), 465.014, 465.022, 893.07(1)(b) FS.
History–Amended 5-19-72, Repromulgated 12-18-74, Formerly 21S-1.18, 21S-1.018, 21S-27.103, 61F10-27.103, Amended 9-
19-94, Formerly 59X-27.103, Amended 10-15-01, 11-18-07.
Podiatric Residents
461.014(1)(f), Florida Statutes - Residency
(f) A person registered as a resident podiatric physician under this section may, in the normal course of his or her employment, prescribe medicinal drugs described in schedules set forth in chapter 893 and pursuant to s. 461.003(5) if:
The person prescribes such medicinal drugs through use of a Drug Enforcement Administration number issued to the hospital or teaching hospital by which the person is employed or at which the person's services are used;
1. The person is identified by a discrete suffix to the identification number issued to such hospital; and 2. The use of the institutional identification number and individual suffixes conforms to the requirements of the federal Drug Enforcement Administration.
15.8
NURSING HOME
Receiving Medications in the Nursing Home
1. Records of receiving a medication:
a. Who and when ordered?
b. Who and when received?
2. Record of source:
a. From the pharmacy?
b. From home?
c. Other?
3. Records of medication delivery (delivery log or delivery manifest) should be maintained
by the facility and vendor Pharmacy for at least 2 years.
These may be used during an AHCA investigation, a DEA investigation or a Medicaid
Audit
NURSING HOME
SAMPLE OF A DELIVERY LOG
Quality Care Pharmacy
6499 38th
Ave N
St.Petersburg Fl 33710
Shady Rest Nursing Home 8/1/2007
11440 49th Street N
Clearwater Florida
8/1/2007 Rx 711000 Mary Smith Furosemide 40mg #30
8/1/2007 Rx 711001 Mary Smith Ibuprofen 400mg #30
8/1/2007 Rx 711002 Mary Smith Slow K 8meq #30
8/1/2007 Rx 683722 Tom Jensen Isosorbide Mononitrate ER 60mg #30
8/1/2007 Rx 711009 Gus Adams Phenytoin ER 100mg #30
__________________________________ ______________________
Nurse Signature Date
15.9
The Disposition of Medication in the Nursing Home
1. Methods of disposition
a. Proof of use (administered to resident as documented on the MAR)
b. Transfer of control drugs to the D.O.N. for Destruction
c. Waste (dropped doses or refused doses)
d. Returned to family or resident
e. Returned to the pharmacy for credit
f. Pilferage (will your audit trail catch missing meds??)
2. Discontinued Medications
a. When a drug order is discontinued the drug must be removed from the normal drug
storage area (i.e. drug cart) and placed in an area clearly marked for discontinued
medications
b. The facility policy will indicate whether the medication can be returned to pharmacy
for credit, destroyed in-house by nursing or if a controlled substance transferred to
the D.O.N. for destruction
c. The facility should have a standard format for logging in these discontinued
medications and identifying what happened to the remaining doses. (see sample
form)
d. The disposition records becomes part of the patient’s permanent chart
3. Discharge Medications in the Nursing Home
a. All medications of discharged residents must be removed from the nursing
drug cart in a “timely manner”.
b. Upon discharge, all medications may be sent home with the resident if so
ordered by the physician.
c. Under certain per diem contracts the meds may need to be returned to
Pharmacy unless the family or facility wishes to pay for the remaining
doses.
d. The disposition records becomes part of the patient’s permanent chart
15.10
NURSING HOMES
4. Compliance issues to be reviewed by the Consultant Pharmacist Monthly
a. Verbal orders not written in the chart
b. New orders were never sent to Pharmacy for processing
c. Discontinued orders still in use
d. Discontinued medications stored with active medications
e. Doctors signatures in place renewing orders in a timely manner (every 30 days)
f. Evidence of primary doctor involved in P.A. prescriptions and controlled
substances orders written by an ARNP
g. All orders have complete directions as described above
h. The audit trail from order (or reorder) to destruction is intact
15.11
NURSING HOME
THE RETURN OF UNIT DOSE MEDICATION TO THE PHARMACY
Note: This regulation does not address the type of facility that can return medications.
The board has taken the position that only facilities with a Pharmacy license and
a Consultant Pharmacist are allowed to return medications for credit.
This would prohibit ALF’s (without a Special ALF license), Group homes, ADT’s,
FACT programs, Juvenile Detention Centers and Correctional facilities without an
Institutional Modified license from returning medication even if they are in unit dosed
packaging and stored centrally.
15.12
NURSING HOME
SAMPLE FORM
Discharge Drug List Form
Patient Name __________________________________________ Room # ______________
Physician __________________________________________________________________
I certify that the following drugs have been delivered to and received by:
1. _____________________________________________________________________
Signature of Charge Nurse Date
I acknowledge that these medications are not currently packed in child resistant packaging and
that I waive this special packaging requirement Yes ( ) No ( )
I request that these medications be repackaged by the Pharmacy in child resistant packaging
prior to my receipt of this medication. Yes ( ) No ( )
2. _____________________________________________________________________
Signature of Patient or Responsible Party Date
Prescription Name Quantity
_____________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
Drugs reviewed and evaluated by pharmacist:
3. _____________________________________________________________________
Signature of Pharmacist Date
4. Disposition of Drugs:
_____________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________
WMC-308
15.13
NURSING HOME
SAMPLE POLICY & METHODS
Medications to Resident on Discharge
POLICY:
It is the policy of this facility to send home the resident’s medications upon discharge if
the physician orders it.
METHODS:
1. The physician must authorize the release of the medication and the nurse must
document his request on the chart.
2. The nurse will complete and sign the disposition of medication form including
the quantity sent with the patient and have the patient or another responsible
person sign as receiving the medications. A copy of this form will be made a
part of the patient’s chart.
3. Control drugs will also be included on the disposition form. Also the proof of
use form for the control drug shall have a notation written on it by the nurse
stating that these drugs have been returned to the patient and this form will also
be signed by the person receiving the control drugs.
4. If the medication being sent with the patient does not have a safety closure
package (i.e., unit dose packaging) the patient must state in writing that they
request a non-complying package.
15.14
NURSING HOME
SAMPLE POLICY & METHODS
Ordering Drugs
POLICY:
Drugs are to be administered only upon the order of a person lawfully authorized to
prescribe. All such orders are to be in writing and signed by the person giving the order.
Each order is to specify the name and strength of the medication, the amount or duration
of therapy, the dosage, the time or frequency of administration, the route if other than
oral, and the site of the injection if so ordered.
There are to be no standing orders for medications or treatments. Telephone orders may
only be given to a pharmacist or licensed nurse and are to be recorded immediately in
the patient’s medical record and signed by the prescriber in a timely manner.
Unless otherwise specified by the prescriber or limited by automatic stop orders, drugs
are to be prescribed for thirty (30) days, dispensed in thirty (30) day quantities. Daily
drug order and receipt records are to be maintained on file in the facility for one (1) year.
METHODS:
1. 9:00 AM medication nurse will be responsible for re-ordering all refill
prescription except HS medications, and all new orders received during her shift
(7-3).
2. The responsible charge nurse on each wing after 3:00 PM will order medications
for new admissions, STAT orders, new orders received during that shift, and HS
renewal orders.
3. When to order:
Prescriptions should be re-ordered when at least four (4) days medication supply
remains. When making a pass only a four day supply of medication remains,
place container on the side shelf for re-ordering when pass is completed. When a
medication has been re-ordered it should be indicated on the Unit-Dose card in
the space indicated. Always check storage bin before re-ordering. Medication
dispensed in containers other than unit-dose cards, shall have a notation placed
on the container that the medication has been re-ordered, the date, and the initials
or name of the person re-ordering. Tape may be used to accomplish this.
15.15
4. A record of medications order transmitted to pharmacy will be kept on each
wing. All new orders will be written on ASCO reorder form #M-1080 and a
Xerox copy will be maintained in the medication room. All new or renewal
order transmittals should be reordered on this form regardless of the pharmacy
supplying the medication. For new prescriptions, the charge nurse at each station
writes in the specifics of the prescription as per the information requested on the
ASCO order form with the notable exception of the prescription number. For
refill prescriptions of any kind, she merely peels off the re-order portion of the
label on the Unit-Dose card and attaches it to the order being sure to specify
whether it is:
a. Notification that is an order previously phoned in:
b. A request for a label change only.
When a peel off label is not affixed to a medication, the nurse will write all
appropriate reorder information directly on the ASCO reorder form.
5. Upon receipt of prepared prescription from a pharmacy, the nurse receiving the
medication will initial, date, and mark the order received on the previously
completed ASCO order form where the original order to the pharmacy was
written. These records shall be retained in an orderly and retrievable manner in
each medication room. The 7-3 medication nurse shall check whether the
previous day reorders have been delivered. The pharmacy should be notified on
that shift if orders have not been received from the previous days orders and an
incident report shall be fined with the director of nursing. The director of
nursing shall report these incidents to the pharmacy consultant and the
Pharmaceutical Services Committee.
6. ONLY a physician, a dentist, a podiatrist, an optometrist or an ARNP may
prescribe drugs. All such orders are to be in writing and signed in writing by the
person giving the order. For the purposes of these procedures, all prescription
and non-prescription medications, vitamin and mineral supplements, intravenous
and irrigating solutions, biologicals and vaccines, and alcohol-containing
beverages are considered to be drugs.
7. EVERY drug order MUST specify all of the following:
a. The name of the medication
b. The strength of the medication, if any.
c. The dosage.
d. The time or frequency of administration.
e. The route of administration, if other than oral
f. The quantity or duration of therapy. (If not specified by the prescriber or
limited by automatic stop orders, drugs are to be prescribed for thirty (30)
days, dispensed in thirty (30) day quantities.
g. PRNs should specify the condition for which they are to be administered.
For example, s needed for painor as needed for sleep.
15.16
8. Each new drug order is to be acknowledged by the charge nurse on duty at the
time the order is received, or by the licensed nurse receiving the order, by
entering the word noted, the nurse’s signature, and the time and date immediately
below the order.
9. There are to be no standing orders for medications or treatments. Nurses may
NOT accept standing orders from any physician for his/her patients in this
facility.
10. The charge nurse on duty at the time the order is received, or the licensed nurse
receiving the order is responsible for ALL the following:
a. Telephoning the new order into the pharmacy exactly as prescribed, and as
soon as possible after receiving and noting it on the physician’s order sheet.
Each medication prescribed for a patient MUST be ordered and
must be available for use regardless of how infrequently it may be used. Stat
orders and orders for emergency drugs not in the emergency drug supply
MUST be telephoned into the pharmacy immediately upon receiving them.
ONLY a licensed nurse or pharmacist may telephone medication orders to
the pharmacy.
b. Entering each newly prescribed medication in the daily drug order and
receipt record and indicating in the record that the medication order has
been telephoned to the pharmacy.
c. Entering each newly prescribed medication on the patient’s current
Medication administration record. When a new order changes the dosage
or dosage interval of an already prescribed medication, the previous entry
on the patient’s current medication administration record is discontinued
by writing “Dc” and the date following the last documented
administration. The new order is then to be entered in the space
designated for medication names and directions.
11. Daily drug order and receipt records and medication re-order forms are to
originate at each nursing station. Medication orders from different nursing
stations are not to be listed on the same order sheet. Each daily drug order and
receipt record and medication reorder form is to be clearly marked as to the
station from which the orders originate, and are to be delivered.
12. Each newly prescribed and re-ordered medication must be entered on that
nursing station’s daily drug order and receipt record. The nurse making the entry
is to include all of the following information and initial the entry:
a. The date ordered.
b. Whether the order is a new order or a re-order.
c. The patient’s name.
d. The name of the drug and the strength, if any, or the prescription number,
if it is a re-order.
15.17
e. The directions for use.
f. The prescriber’s name.
g. The name of the pharmacy, if other than the usual pharmacy. If the
patient or his/her responsible party request the medication be ordered by
telephone from a pharmacy of their choice, in accordance with the
procedures for ordering drugs from other pharmacies, the entry may be
made on the same daily drug order and receipt record. The nurse making
the entry must, however, mark the pharmacy’s name prominently on the
entry line.
The original (top) copy of the daily drug order and receipt record is to be
forwarded to the pharmacy and the carbon is to be kept as a record of
what was ordered. The pharmacy is to return the original with the re-
ordered medications and in accordance with the procedures for receiving
drugs, the original and the carbon are to be stapled together and the
completed record filed at the business office in the log designated for that
purpose. The billing clerk is responsible for maintaining a log of
completed daily drug order and receipt records on file for one (1) year.
13. There are only four (4) kinds of drug orders. They are:
a. New, handwritten orders, entered on a physician’s order sheet and signed
by the prescriber.
b. New orders, received verbally over the telephone or received verbally in
person, such as when the prescriber is leaving the facility.
c. New, signed orders on a transfer sheet from a hospital or other health care
facility.
d. Drug re-orders.
14. In addition to the standard procedures for ordering drugs, the following
procedures apply to:
NEW HANDWRITTEN ORDERS, ENTERED ON A PHYSICIAN’S
ORDER SHEET AND SIGNED BY THE PRESCRIBER.
a. The director of nursing services is responsible for instructing ALL
Nursing and administrative staff to inform the director of nursing and/or
all charge nurse(s) when any physician enters the building.
b. The charge nurse on duty at the time the order is received is responsible
for clarifying the order BEFORE the physician leaves the nursing station.
c. The nurse receiving the order is responsible for sending the pharmacy a
transcription of the physician’s order each time he/she is in facility and
signs an order for medications.
15.18
15. In addition to the standard procedures for ordering drugs, the following
procedures apply to:
NEW ORDERS RECEIVED VERBALLY OVER THE TELEPHONE
OR IN PERSON
a. Verbal orders for medications are to be handled in the same manner
whether received over the telephone or in person such as when the
physician is leaving the facility. Only a licensed nurse or registered
health care practitioner in the course of their responsibility may receive a
verbal order for a drug. The practitioner receiving the order should enter
the order into chart and other entries for the medication record keeping
system, including physicians orders, a telephone order verification form
(when applicable), the MAR and the monthly update record.
b. The licensed practitioner receiving the verbal order is required to enter
each medication ordered on a telephone order form:
Copy of Telephone Order Form in this space
The telephone order form is a three-part NCR (carbonless) form. The
original copy of the form must be mailed to the prescriber for signing.
The second duplicate copy is to be taped on the page designated for that
purpose located just behind the physician’s order sheet in the patient’s
chart. The third copy is placed in the consultant pharmacist mail box.
When the signed copies are returned to the facility by the doctor, the
original is to be taped in the patient’s chart replacing the duplicate second
copy which may be discarded. When the physician signs the charted
order at the time of his next visit, the signed, original telephone order
may be discarded.
c. Verbal orders for Schedule II drugs are permitted only in the case of a
bona fide emergency situation.
16. In addition to the standard procedures for ordering drugs, the following
procedures apply to:
NEW, SIGNED ORDERS, ON A TRANSFER SHEET FROM A HOSPITAL
OR OTHER HEALTH CARE FACILITY.
15.19
a. When a transfer sheet containing medication orders (1) bears a
physician’s signature, and (2) indicates the medication(s) is to be
continued in this facility, the charge nurse on duty at the time the order is
received, or the licensed nurse receiving the order, is responsible for
verifying the order over the telephone with the patient’s physician before
drugs are administered. The nurse is responsible for documenting the
telephone verification on the admission orders by entering the phrase,
Admission orders verified per telephone, the nurse’s signature, the time
and date.
b. Where NO physician’s signature appears on the transfer sheet, admission
orders must be verified over the telephone with the patient’s physician
before drugs are administered, and then signed by the patient’s physician
within forty-eight (48) hours according to the procedures for a telephone
order.
17. In addition to the standard procedures for ordering drugs, the following
procedures apply to:
DRUG RE-ORDERS
a. Each medication prescribed for a patient must be available for use at least
twenty four (24) hours in advance of exhausting the supply on hand
regardless of how infrequently it may be used. Routinely administered
drugs are to be re-ordered three (3) to four (4) days before the last dose
on hand is expected to be given.
b. Re-orders can be made by removing the special peel-off label from the
medication container and placing it in the space provided on the
medication re-order form.
c. The nurse re-ordering the medication is responsible for identifying any
error which appears on the label, or noting any change in directions for
use which have occurred since the medication was originally dispensed.
d. In the event the special peel-off label from the container is not available,
re-orders can be made by entering the patient’s name, prescription
number, name and strength of the medication, current directions for use,
and the physician’s name in the spaces provided on the daily drug order
and receipt record, and indicating it is a re-order without a reorder label.
e. Regardless of whether the peel-off label is available, all re-ordered
medications must be entered on that nursing station’s daily drug order
and receipt record. This is the only permanent record of re-ordered drugs
kept in the facility and it must be kept for each re-ordered medication.
f. When the medication re-order form and the daily drug order and receipt
record are completed, they are to be placed in the pharmacy pick up
basket for pick up by the pharmacy messenger service at the next
regularly scheduled pick up and delivery.
15.20
NURSING HOME
SAMPLE POLICY & METHODS
New Orders to Begin on Arrival
POLICY:
It is the policy of this facility to provide residents with new medication orders in a
timely manner.
METHODS:
1. Nurses receiving medication orders from the physician shall determine how
quickly the medication should be started.
2. If the order is of a STAT nature, to begin immediately, the pharmacy shall
immediately be notified and asked to provide the drug as quickly as possible.
3. If the order is of a routine nature, the medication shall be ordered from the
pharmacy using the usual procedures for ordering.
4. All routine new orders shall be written to include the phrase may begin on
arrival.
5. The routine order shall be administered as soon as received if appropriate with
the directions.
15.21
NURSING HOME
SAMPLE POLICY & METHODS
Receiving Drugs
POLICY:
Medications are to be received from the issuing pharmacy on a prompt and timely basis.
For each medication ordered, a record is to be maintained by the licensed nursing staff
showing the name of the patient, the drug’s name and strength, the quantity ordered and
received, the date ordered and received, and the name of the issuing pharmacy. The
record is to be maintained on file in the facility for one (1) year.
State Survey Manual
59A-4.112 (3) The consultant pharmacist shall establish a system to accurately
record the receipt and disposition of all controlled drugs in sufficient detail to
enable an accurate reconciliation.
59A-4.112 (4) The pharmacist shall determine that drug records are in order and
that an account of all controlled drugs is maintained and periodically reconciled.
59A-4.112 (7) All controlled substances shall be disposed of in accordance with
state and federal laws. All non-controlled substances may be destroyed in
accordance with the facility’s policies and procedures. Records of the
disposition of all substances shall be maintained in sufficient detail to enable an
accurate reconciliation.
METHODS:
1. Prompt and timely availability is interpreted as follows:
a. All new drug orders are to be received and available for administration on
the day they are ordered by the physician unless the drug would not
usually be started until the next day, in which case it is to be received
before the first dose would ordinarily be administered.
b. Drugs ordered from the pharmacy during their regularly scheduled
business hours on an emergency or stat basis should be received and
administered within one (1) hour.
c. Drugs ordered from the pharmacy after their regularly scheduled business
Hours on an emergency or stat basis are to be received and
administered not more than two (2) hours after the order is received from
the prescriber.
d. The reason(s) for deviating from the above procedures should be
documented in the patient’s chart.
15.22
2. Medication delivered to the facility from any pharmacy must be received by a
licensed nurse.
3. The receipt of each medication is to be recorded on the original or copy of the
daily drug order and receipt record. The licensed nurse checking in the
medication is to record the quantity of the medication received, and date and
initial the record, thereby documenting that the medication was received.
4. If an ordered medication is not received and there is no explanation from the
pharmacy, the pharmacy is to be contacted by telephone as soon as possible to
determine why the medication was not sent.
5. The licensed nurse receiving the medication is responsible for verifying
medication received and the directions for use with the medication ordered and
with the physician’s order in the patient’s medical record.
6. Disposition of Orders Once Received: To put an order away, first determine via
the pharmacy order book if it is a new or a refill prescription, and if refill, what
kind. If it is new, place one card in each dosage drawer.
Example: If medication is given QID, and if you are using a time pass method,
place one card in each of the 9:00, 1:00, 5:00, and 9:00 bins in front of that
patient’s divider card.
On refills, place the entire prescription in a storage bin under that Patient’s name
(or immediately behind the correct patient’s in use card in the medication bins)
and leave there until old card in the dosage bin is utilized. Once again:
ALWAYS CHECK STORAGE BIN BEFORE RE-ORDERING.
If the refill is a PRN box replacement, you will want to immediately put it in the
PRN box.
When a card on a pass is emptied and the cart is returned to the nursing station
the storage bin should be immediately checked for a replacement medication
card or an emergency re-order should be made (for delivery the next day).
15.23
NURSING HOME
SAMPLE POLICY & METHODS
Ordering and Receiving Drugs from Other Pharmacies
POLICY:
Medications brought into the facility by or with the patient or by the patient’s family are
to be used only upon a written order by the patient’s physician and only when the
contents of the medication container are known to be consistent with that which appears
on its label.
Patients or their responsible parties, who want to purchase medications from a pharmacy
other than the facility’s contractual pharmacy supplier, may do so provided:
(1) They and their pharmacist sign a notice of intent to purchase medications
from an outside pharmacy; and
(2) They and their pharmacy adhere to the facility’s policies and procedures
for drug labeling, packaging, prompt and timely delivery of medication,
emergency service, drug regimen review, etc.
The facility retains the right to terminate the agreement for cause and, in the event of an
emergency, to order any drug, medication, or related supply for the patient from the
facility’s regular pharmacy supplier.
METHODS:
1. Medications brought into the facility by or with the patient or by the patient’s
family are to be used only if ALL of the following conditions are met:
a. The drug has been ordered by the patient’s physician and the order
entered in the patient’s medical record.
b. The medication container or prescription vial is clearly and properly
labeled in accordance with the facility’s procedures for drug labeling.
c. The contents of the container or prescription vial have been examined
and positively identified after its arrival in the facility by a physician or a
pharmacist, unless the medication has come directly from another health
care facility. For example, discharge medications from an acute hospital
which have come in the ambulance with the patient or those delivered
directly by an outside pharmacy need not be identified by the physician
or pharmacist unless the nurse has reason to question the contents.
2. If the patient’s physician is not available to identify the contents of medication
brought into the facility by the patient or member of the family, the medication is
to be entered on the daily drug order and receipt record and the words verify
contents written. The medication is then to be sent to the pharmacy for
identification with the regularly scheduled pick-up.
15.24
3. Patients or their responsible parties who want to purchase medication from a
pharmacy other than the facility’s contractual pharmacy supplier may do so
provided:
a. The patient or their responsible party and their pharmacist sign a notice of
intent to purchase medications from an outside pharmacy.
b. The patient or their responsible party and their pharmacy adhere to the
terms of the notice, and the facility’s policies and procedures for drug
labeling, packaging, prompt and timely delivery of medication,
emergency service, drug regimen review, etc.
4. When the patient or their responsible party indicate that they wish to purchase
drugs from a pharmacy other than the facility’s regular pharmacy supplier, the
administrator, billing clerk, or the charge nurse on duty at the time is to provide
them with a copy of the notice of intent to purchase medications from an outside
pharmacy. A supply of notices is stored at the nursing station and the business
office. A copy of all relevant policies and procedures is to be provided to the
outside pharmacy upon request. The completed and signed copy of the notice is
to be maintained in the Patient’s medical record.
5. When the completed and signed copy of the notice is received and placed in the
patient’s chart, the charge nurse on duty at the time is to mark the patient’s
current medication administration record and drug storage box with the name of
the outside pharmacy to indicate the proper order source. Thereafter, drug orders
are to be telephoned to the outside pharmacy, and each order is to be entered in
the daily drug order and receipt record, prominently indicating the name of the
outside pharmacy.
6. In order to avoid delays associated with verifying the contents of medications, all
drugs and related supplies ordered from an outside pharmacy are to be shipped
directly from the pharmacy to the nursing station. Shipment may be carried
ONLY by:
a. A licensed pharmacist;
b. An agent of the pharmacy;
c. An independent bonded delivery;
d. A licensed physician;
e. Parcel delivery; or
f. The patient’s responsible party (or delegated family member).
Medication delivered in any other way must be verified by the regular pharmacy.
Under no circumstances shall medications, whether prescription or non-
prescription be brought to the patient’s bedside.
7. If a situation occurs where the delivery of the patient’s medication from the
outside pharmacy is delayed or uncertain, the medication nurse is to order by
telephone a seven (7) day supply of all drugs needed for administration from the
regular pharmacy. If this is done, the nurse placing the order is to notify the
billing clerk of the situation for clarification in the next billing.