Riverwalk Village: Medications Left Unattended at Bedside - IN
Inspectors arrived at the resident's room on the morning of November 17, 2025, at 10:28 a.m. and found the medication cup still sitting there, more than an hour after the morning medication pass had come through. The resident, identified in inspection records as Resident J, told them she had too many pills to take all at once in the morning.
The cup held nine medications: amlodipine, a calcium channel blocker for blood pressure; furosemide, a diuretic; losartan, a hypertensive; metoprolol succinate, a beta blocker; fluoxetine, an antidepressant; pramipexole, a dopamine agonist; magnesium gluconate; vitamin B-12; and 500 milligrams of vitamin C. All nine were confirmed against the resident's physician orders.
Three minutes after speaking with the resident, inspectors talked to LPN 6, the nurse who had made the morning medication pass. She said she had left the medications at the bedside. She also said, without prompting, that medications should not be left at the bedside.
The resident's clinical record had no physician's order allowing medications to be left unattended. It had no physician's order allowing the resident to self-administer. The facility's own medication administration policy, dated February 2010, was explicit: nurses are to observe residents taking medications, and meds are not to be left at the bedside.
Resident J's diagnosis list runs long. She is managing chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, acute and chronic respiratory failure with hypoxia, pulmonary edema, congestive heart failure, multiple sclerosis, chronic pain syndrome, iron deficiency anemia, depression, gastroesophageal reflux disease, osteoarthritis, spinal stenosis, glaucoma, hypertension, pulmonary hypertension, nonrheumatic tricuspid valve insufficiency, and a personal history of sudden cardiac arrest. She has a cardiac pacemaker. Her quarterly assessment, completed just three days before inspectors arrived, found her cognitively intact.
That last detail matters. The facility's own process for leaving medications at a resident's bedside, had it existed, would have required a self-administration assessment and a physician's order. Neither had been done for Resident J. The gap wasn't a judgment call made in the moment. There was simply no authorization of any kind.
A second nurse, LPN 3, told inspectors that afternoon that medications were only left at the bedside when a physician's order existed for it. That is the policy. That is also what did not happen here.
The Director of Nursing, interviewed on November 19, said it plainly: LPN 6 should not have left the medications at the bedside. It was not the facility's expectation that nurses would do so.
The violation was cited at a level of minimal harm or potential for actual harm, affecting a small number of residents. But the medications sitting in that cup were not low-stakes. Furosemide pulls fluid from the body and can cause dangerous drops in blood pressure if taken incorrectly. Metoprolol controls heart rate. Amlodipine and losartan manage blood pressure through separate mechanisms. Pramipexole acts on dopamine receptors and carries warnings about compulsive behavior and sudden sleep onset. For a woman with congestive heart failure, a pacemaker, and a history of cardiac arrest, the timing and supervision of these drugs is not a bureaucratic formality.
Resident J told inspectors she had too many pills to take at one time. That is not a clinical assessment. That is a resident, alone in her room with a cup of nine medications and no nurse present, deciding for herself what to do next.
Nobody had checked whether she was capable of making that call safely. Nobody had asked a physician to authorize it. The cup just sat there.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Riverwalk Village from 2025-11-19 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.
Additional Resources
Data source: Official federal inspection data from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS).
Editorial process: AI-synthesized regulatory data, reviewed for accuracy by our editorial team.
Professional review: All content reviewed by Christopher F. Nesbitt, Sr., NH EMT & BU-trained Paralegal.
Last verified: June 20, 2026 · Our methodology
RIVERWALK VILLAGE in NOBLESVILLE, IN was cited for violations during a health inspection on November 19, 2025.
Inspectors arrived at the resident's room on the morning of November 17, 2025, at 10:28 a.m.
Health inspections identify deficiencies that facilities must correct. Violations range from minor documentation issues to serious safety concerns. Review the full report below for specific details and facility response.