Benson Heights: Respiratory & Medication Failures - WA
KENT, WASHINGTON - A February 2025 state inspection of Benson Heights Rehabilitation Center uncovered serious deficiencies in respiratory care monitoring, pain medication administration, and dietary services that placed vulnerable residents at risk for adverse health outcomes and diminished quality of life.
Critical Lapses in Oxygen Monitoring Endangered Resident with Respiratory Failure
The most concerning violation involved a resident with documented respiratory failure whose dangerously low oxygen levels went unreported to medical providers for weeks, despite explicit physician orders requiring notification. The resident's blood oxygen levels dropped to 90% or below on at least eight documented occasions between February 1 and February 15, 2025, yet nursing staff failed to alert the physician as required.
Medical records showed this resident had a comprehensive care plan mandating staff monitor for signs of respiratory distress, including decreased blood oxygen levels, with immediate provider notification required. A physician's order from May 2024 specifically directed staff to monitor oxygen levels every shift and notify the provider when levels dropped while the resident was using supplemental oxygen.
When blood oxygen saturation falls below 90%, tissues and organs begin receiving insufficient oxygen, a condition called hypoxemia. This can lead to confusion, rapid heart rate, shortness of breath, and in severe cases, organ damage or failure. The risk becomes particularly acute for individuals with pre-existing respiratory conditions, where even minor drops in oxygen levels can trigger cascading health complications.
The facility's Unit Manager acknowledged that "low O2 levels should be documented in Resident 38's progress notes and the provider should have been notified." The Director of Nursing confirmed this represented a serious breach of protocol, stating it was essential to notify providers of oxygen level changes to ensure appropriate care adjustments.
Pain Medication Errors Left Residents in Unnecessary Discomfort
Inspectors discovered systematic failures in pain management protocols affecting multiple residents. In one case, nursing staff repeatedly administered incorrect dosages of pain medication, ignoring physician-ordered parameters based on the resident's reported pain levels.
A resident with chronic nerve pain from a spinal cord stroke had specific orders for 5 milligrams of pain medication when experiencing pain levels of 3-6 on a 10-point scale, and 10 milligrams for pain levels of 7-10. However, medication records revealed staff administered the higher 10-milligram dose when the resident reported pain below 7, while giving only the 5-milligram dose when pain exceeded 7 on multiple occasions in February 2025.
The resident confirmed the inadequacy of their pain management, stating "sometimes after taking their pain medication they still had a pain level of 6/10 on the pain scale and did not think the pain medication was enough."
Proper pain management protocols exist to ensure residents receive appropriate relief while minimizing risks of oversedation or medication side effects. When staff deviate from prescribed parameters, residents may experience either inadequate pain control affecting their mobility, sleep, and overall quality of life, or excessive medication leading to dangerous sedation, falls, or respiratory depression.
Another resident receiving multiple pain medications exhibited persistent lethargy and excessive daytime sleepiness, repeatedly apologizing for being unable to stay awake during conversations. Despite these clear signs of potential overmedication, no monitoring orders existed to track side effects, and staff had not evaluated whether the medications were causing the sedation.
Antibiotic Administration Error Exposed Resident to Unnecessary Medication Risks
A medication transcription error resulted in a resident receiving antibiotics for 23 days instead of the physician-ordered 14-day course for a sinus infection. The error occurred when a Unit Manager revised the antibiotic order on January 24 but inadvertently left the 14-day duration notation in the order, causing the system to restart the entire course.
Extended antibiotic use beyond prescribed durations increases risks of antibiotic resistance, disruption of beneficial gut bacteria, and adverse reactions including allergic responses, kidney problems, and dangerous intestinal infections. The facility's Infection Preventionist confirmed the resident "should have received the antibiotic for 14 days and not for 23 days."