Wayne Woodlands Manor: Pain Med Order Violations - PA
The drug was Hydrocodone/Acetaminophen 5/325mg, a combination opioid prescribed on an as-needed basis. The provider had set a specific pain threshold that had to be met before a dose could be administered. Inspectors did not disclose in the report what that threshold was, only that the resident's documented pain scores, which ranged from 6 to 9 on a standard scale, did not meet it on any of the 19 occasions the medication was given.
The doses came at all hours. Early mornings, late evenings, the middle of the night. September 5 at 11:20 in the morning, pain score 7. September 7 at 4:47 in the morning, pain score 9. September 14 at 6:39 in the morning, pain score 6. September 17 alone saw three separate doses, at 2:37 AM, 8:54 AM, and 4:31 PM. The clinical record contained no documentation explaining the clinical reasoning for any of these administrations.
That absence matters. When a nurse gives a controlled substance outside the parameters of a physician's order, the expectation is that something in the chart explains the decision. A note. A call to the prescriber. Some record that a clinician weighed the situation and made a judgment. Here, there was nothing.
The pattern ran from September 5 through September 17. Twelve days, 19 doses, no paperwork trail explaining a single one.
Inspectors raised their findings with the Director of Nursing on November 21, 2025, the same day the complaint inspection was completed. The inspection report does not describe what the Director of Nursing said in response.
What the report leaves open is the question of whether the resident was actually undertreated, overtreated, or something else entirely. A pain score that doesn't meet an ordered threshold could mean the medication wasn't warranted. It could also mean the threshold itself was set conservatively and nurses were making judgment calls they never documented. The inspection report doesn't resolve that. What it establishes is that the orders weren't followed and the chart offers no explanation for why.
Hydrocodone is a Schedule II controlled substance. Its administration is supposed to be tracked precisely, not because regulators demand paperwork for its own sake, but because opioid dosing errors, in either direction, carry real consequences for vulnerable patients. Too much, and a frail elderly resident faces sedation, falls, respiratory depression. Too little, and undertreated pain compounds suffering and slows recovery. The physician's order is the mechanism that's supposed to keep that calibration right. At Wayne Woodlands Manor, that mechanism failed 19 times in less than two weeks, and no one documented a reason.
The resident at the center of these findings is identified in the report only as CR1.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Wayne Woodlands Manor from 2025-11-21 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
WAYNE WOODLANDS MANOR in WAYMART, PA was cited for violations during a health inspection on November 21, 2025.
The drug was Hydrocodone/Acetaminophen 5/325mg, a combination opioid prescribed on an as-needed basis.
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.