The medication error at The Brazos of Waco occurred on September 20, 2025, when an agency nurse administered an incorrect dose of Valacyclovir to Resident #1. The patient was hospitalized two days later with metabolic encephalopathy, a condition where the brain doesn't receive enough oxygen or nutrients, leading to changes in brain function.

Hospital admission records from September 22 attributed the resident's condition to Valacyclovir toxicity.
The morning after the medication error, Resident #1's family noticed something was wrong. During an interview on September 26, LVN A, who spoke Spanish like the resident, described what happened next.
"After breakfast on 09/21/2025, Resident #1's family member stated that Resident #1 was very confused and was not answering questions appropriately," LVN A said.
LVN A assessed the resident and found alarming symptoms. The patient had slurred speech and couldn't follow commands. LVN A immediately notified the nurse practitioner, who examined the resident and ordered emergency transport to the hospital.
The facility's investigation revealed the agency nurse was responsible for the medication error. According to the facility's investigation report dated September 22, administrators completed a medication error report and notified the appropriate physician and responsible parties. The agency nurse was suspended pending further investigation.
More concerning, the facility discovered it had made an error in hiring the agency nurse in the first place. The facility notified the agency representative that the nurse was not to return.
Within hours of discovering the error, facility administrators launched a comprehensive audit. They reviewed hospital discharge orders for every resident admitted to the facility between August 23 and September 22, 2025 — a full month of admissions. They compared these orders to the admitting orders entered into the electronic medical record and cross-referenced them with medication reconciliation reports.
The audit found no other errors during that period.
On September 22, the Clinical Services Director conducted emergency re-education sessions for administrative nurses on medication reconciliation processes. The training focused on confirming admission orders with physicians and properly reconciling medications when residents transfer between care settings.
The facility held an emergency quality assurance meeting the same day. Staff signed in-service sheets documenting their attendance at medication reconciliation training.
Federal inspectors interviewed multiple staff members on September 26 to verify the corrective actions had taken place.
At 2:43 PM, ADON D confirmed she received training from the Clinical Services Director on medication reconciliation processes, as documented on the September 22 in-service sign-in sheet.
The Director of Nursing, interviewed at 5:13 PM, also confirmed her training. She described significant changes to weekend staffing protocols to prevent future errors.
"Weekend staffing was amended to include a member of the nursing leadership team to ensure a second nurse reviews medication reconciliation during non-business hours," the DON said.
The new protocol requires the DON, two Assistant Directors of Nursing, and the MDS nurse to each work one weekend per month. This ensures nursing leadership coverage for medication reconciliation reviews around the clock.
RN F, interviewed at 5:14 PM, confirmed receiving training on the new second-nurse review process for medication reconciliation.
LVN I, interviewed at 5:50 PM, also confirmed training on the second-nurse review requirement. She verified attending the Clinical Services Director's training session documented on the September 22 sign-in sheet.
Federal inspectors reviewed the facility's medication reconciliation policy during their investigation. The undated policy specifically addresses situations like the one that harmed Resident #1.
Policy statement #2 reads: "Residents who are being readmitted to our facility after an acute care stay will have review of the most current SNF discharge medication profile with the readmission medication orders to validate that the resident has a comprehensive and accurate medication profile."
The policy requirement existed, but the agency nurse failed to follow it properly.
To verify the facility's corrective actions, inspectors conducted their own audit on September 26. They randomly selected five residents' medical records and compared hospital discharge orders to admitting orders. The review confirmed the facility's audit outcomes were accurate.
The inspection revealed the facility had identified the violation as "previously non-compliant" before federal inspectors arrived. The immediate jeopardy period lasted from September 20, when the medication error occurred, through September 22, when the facility implemented corrective measures.
Federal inspectors classified the violation as causing "immediate jeopardy to resident health or safety" affecting "few" residents. The designation reflects the severity of giving wrong medication doses that can cause brain toxicity.
The facility corrected the immediate jeopardy violation before the federal investigation began on September 26. However, the rapid hospitalization of a resident due to medication toxicity triggered the complaint investigation that documented the full scope of the error.
Metabolic encephalopathy from medication toxicity can cause lasting neurological effects. The inspection report does not indicate Resident #1's current condition or whether the brain function changes proved reversible.
The case highlights vulnerabilities in nursing home medication management when facilities use agency staff unfamiliar with proper reconciliation procedures. The resident's family recognized the dramatic change in mental status that preceded emergency hospitalization, but only after a day had passed since the medication error occurred.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for The Brazos of Waco from 2025-09-26 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.