Ill. Admin. Code tit. 77, § 300.1610 - Medication Policies and Procedures
a) Development of Medication Policies
1) Every facility shall adopt written
policies and procedures for properly and promptly obtaining, dispensing,
administering, returning, and disposing of drugs and medications. These
policies and procedures shall be consistent with the Act and this Part and
shall be followed by the facility. These policies and procedures shall be in
compliance with all applicable federal, State and local laws.
2) Medication policies and procedures shall
be developed with the advice of a pharmaceutical advisory committee that
includes at least one licensed pharmacist, one physician, the administrator and
the director of nursing. This committee shall meet at least
quarterly.
b) For the
purpose of this Subpart, "licensed prescriber" means a physician; a dentist; a
podiatrist; an optometrist certified to use therapeutic ocular pharmaceutical
agents; a physician assistant to whom prescriptive authority has been delegated
by a supervising physician; or an advanced practice nurse practicing under a
valid collaborative agreement.
c)
All legend medications maintained in the facility shall be on individual
prescription or from the licensed prescriber's personal office supply, and
shall be labeled as set forth in Section
300.1640. A licensed prescriber
who dispenses medication from his or her personal office supply shall comply
with Sections 33 and 54.5 of the Medical Practice Act of 1987; or Section 51 of
the Illinois Dental Practice Act; or the Podiatric Medical Practice Act of
1987; or Section 15.1 of the Illinois Optometric Practice Act of 1987; or
Section 15-20 of the Nurse Practice Act; or Section 7.5 of the Physician
Assistant Practice Act of 1987.
d)
All medications administered shall be recorded as set forth in Section
300.1810. Medications shall not
be recorded as having been administered prior to their actual administration to
the resident.
e) The staff
pharmacist or consultant pharmacist shall participate in the planned in-service
education program of the facility on topics related to pharmaceutical
service.
f) A pharmacist shall
obtain a Division III license to operate an on-premises pharmacy in accordance
with the Pharmacy Practice Act and 68 Ill. Adm. Code 1330.
g) No facility shall maintain a stock supply
of controlled drugs or legend drugs, except for those in the emergency
medication kits and convenience boxes, as described in this Section.
h) A facility may stock drugs that are
regularly available without prescription. These shall be administered to a
resident only upon the order of a licensed prescriber (see Section
300.1620). Administration shall
be from the original containers, and shall be recorded in the resident's
clinical record.
i) A facility may
keep convenience boxes containing medications to be used for initial doses.
1) The contents and number of convenience
boxes shall be determined by the pharmaceutical advisory committee. The
contents shall be listed on the outside of each box.
2) Each convenience box shall be the property
of and under the control of the pharmacy that supplies the contents of the box,
and it shall be kept in a locked medicine room or cabinet.
3) No Schedule II controlled substances shall
be kept in convenience boxes.
j) The contents and number of emergency
medication kits shall be approved by the facility's pharmaceutical advisory
committee, and shall be available for immediate use at all times in locations
determined by the pharmaceutical advisory committee.
1) Each emergency medication kit shall be
sealed after it has been checked and refilled.
2) Emergency medication kits shall also
contain all of the equipment needed to administer the medications.
3) The contents of emergency medication kits
shall be labeled on the outside of each kit. The kits shall be checked and
refilled by the pharmacy after use and as otherwise needed. The pharmaceutical
advisory committee shall review the list of substances kept in emergency
medication kits at least quarterly. Written documentation of this review shall
be maintained.
k) The
following requirements shall be met when controlled substances are kept as part
of the emergency medication kits:
1) If an
emergency medication kit is not stored in a locked room or cabinet, or if the
kit contains controlled substances that require refrigeration, then the
controlled substances portion of the kit shall be stored separately in a locked
cabinet or room (or locked refrigerator or a locked container within a
refrigerator, as appropriate) and labeled with a list of the substances and a
statement that they are part of the emergency medication kit. The label of the
emergency medication kit shall list the substances and the specific location
where they are stored.
2)
Controlled substances for emergency medication kits shall be obtained from a
federal Drug Enforcement Administration registered hospital, pharmacy, or
licensed prescriber.
3) Only the
director of nursing, registered nurse on duty, licensed practical nurse on
duty, consultant pharmacist or licensed prescriber shall have access to
controlled substances stored in emergency medication kits.
4) No more than ten different controlled
substances shall be kept as part of an emergency medication kit, and there
shall be no more than three single doses of any one controlled
substance.
5) Controlled substances
in emergency medication kits shall be administered only by persons licensed to
administer medications, in compliance with
21 CFR
1306.11 and
1306.21
and the Illinois Controlled Substances Act.
6) A proof-of-use sheet shall be stored with
each controlled substance. Entries shall be made on the proof-of-use sheet by
the nursing staff or licensed prescriber when any controlled substance from the
kit is used. The consultant pharmacist shall receive and file for two years a
copy of all completed proof-of-use sheets.
7) Whenever the controlled substance portion
of an emergency medication kit is opened, the consultant pharmacist shall be
notified within 24 hours afterward. During any period when this kit is opened,
a shift count shall be done on all controlled substances until the kit is
closed or locked, or the controlled substance is replaced. Shift counts are not
mandatory when the kit is sealed. Forms for shift counts shall be kept with the
controlled substances portion of the emergency medication kit.
8) The consultant pharmacist shall check the
controlled substances portions of emergency medication kits at least monthly
and document each check on the outside of each kit.
9) Failure to comply with any provision of
this Section or with any applicable provision of State or federal statutes or
State regulations pertaining to controlled substances shall result in loss of
the privilege of having or placing controlled substances in emergency
medication kits until the facility can demonstrate that it is in compliance
with the regulations. This is in addition to the usual methods of corrective
action available to the Department, such as fines and other
penalties.
l) Oxygen may
be administered in a facility. The oxygen supply shall be stored and handled in
accordance with NFPA 99 for nonflammable medical gas systems. The facility
shall comply with directions for use of oxygen systems as established by the
manufacturer and the applicable provisions of NFPA 101.
1) Facilities shall store medical grade
products separately from industrial grade products. The storage area for
medical grade products shall be well defined with one area for receiving full
medical gas vessels and another for storing empty vessels.
2) All personnel who will be handling medical
gases shall be trained to recognize the various medical gas labels. Personnel
shall be trained to examine all labels carefully.
3) If the facility's supplier uses 360-degree
wrap-around labels to designate medical oxygen, personnel shall be specifically
trained to make sure each vessel they connect to the oxygen system bears an
identical label.
4) All facility
personnel responsible for changing or installing medical gas vessels shall be
trained to connect medical gas vessels properly. Personnel shall understand how
vessels are connected to the oxygen supply system and shall be alerted to the
serious consequences of changing connections.
5) If a medical gas vessel fitting does not
seem to connect to the oxygen system fitting, the supplier shall be contacted
immediately. The vessel shall be returned to the supplier to determine the
fitting or connection problem.
6)
Once a medical gas vessel has been connected to the oxygen supply system, but
prior to introducing the product into the system, a trained facility staff
member shall ensure that the correct vessel has been connected
properly.
Notes
Amended at 27 Ill. Reg. 5862, effective April 01, 2003
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.