Minn. R. agency 144, ch. 4658, MEDICATIONS, pt. 4658.1320 - MEDICATION ERRORS
A nursing home must ensure that:
A. Its medication error rate is less than
five percent as described in the Interpretive Guidelines for Code of Federal
Regulations, title 42, section 483.25(m), found in Appendix P of the State
Operations Manual, Guidance to Surveyors for Long-Term Care Facilities, which
is incorporated by reference in part 4658.1315. For purposes of this part, a
medication error means:
(1) a discrepancy
between what was prescribed and what medications are actually administered to
residents in the nursing home; or
(2) the administration of expired
medications.
B. It is
free of any significant medication error. A significant medication error is:
(1) an error which causes the resident
discomfort or jeopardizes the resident's health or safety; or
(2) medication from a category that usually
requires the medication in the resident's blood to be titrated to a specific
blood level and a single medication error could alter that level and
precipitate a reoccurrence of symptoms or toxicity.
C. All medications are administered as
prescribed. An incident report or medication error report must be filed for any
medication error that occurs. Any significant medication errors or resident
reactions must be reported to the physician or the physician's designee and the
resident or the resident's legal guardian or designated representative and an
explanation must be made in the resident's clinical record.
Notes
Statutory Authority: MS s 144A.04; 144A.08; 256B.431
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