26 Tex. Admin. Code § 554.1508 - Drug Administration
(a) The
facility must establish drug administration procedures to ensure that:
(1) drugs to be administered are checked
against the physician's orders;
(2)
the resident is identified before the administration of a drug;
(3) each resident has an individual
medication record, where the dose of drug administered is properly recorded by
the person who administered the drug;
(4) drugs and biologicals are prepared and
administered by the same person, except under unit-of-use package distribution
systems and as outlined in § 554.418 of Title 40 (relating to
Self-Administration of Drugs); and
(5) drugs prescribed for one resident must
not be administered to any other person.
(b) The facility nursing staff must report
drug errors and adverse drug reactions to the resident's physician in a timely
manner, as warranted by an assessment of the resident's condition, and record
them in the resident's record. An incident report must be completed in
accordance with § 554.1923 of Title 40 (relating to Incident or Accident
Reporting). Medication errors include, but are not limited to, administering
the wrong medication, administering at the wrong time, administering the wrong
dosage strength, administering by the wrong route, omitting a medication,
and/or administering to the wrong resident.
(c) Nursing facilities must have current
medication reference texts or sources, including information on pediatric
medications, dosages, sites, routes, techniques of drug administration, desired
effects, and possible side effects, if facilities have pediatric
residents.
(d) A licensed nurse may
exercise professional judgment in the crushing of a medication, providing that
the medication is not a time-released or enteric coated medication.
(1) If there is any question about crushing a
medication for a resident, the licensed nurse must check with the treating
physician, dispensing pharmacist, or consultant pharmacist.
(2) The crushed medication should be
administered as soon as feasible once it has been added to another
substance.
Notes
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