The incident at Woodstock Valley Health and Rehabilitation occurred on August 10, when RN #1 administered both tramadol and oxycodone to a resident whose prescriptions for those drugs had been discontinued six days earlier.

Resident #1 had valid orders for the pain medications dating back to May and June. The tramadol prescription called for 50mg tablets every four hours as needed. The oxycodone was prescribed at 5mg every six hours for pain relief.
But when the resident was hospitalized on July 29 and returned to the facility on August 4, both medication orders were discontinued.
Six days later, the nurse found medication cards bearing the resident's name in the medication cart and made a critical assumption. At 9:15 a.m., she administered one tablet of tramadol 50mg. Two hours and fifteen minutes later, she gave the resident one tablet of oxycodone 5mg.
Neither medication had an active physician's order.
When federal inspectors interviewed the nurse on September 23, she acknowledged her error. RN #1 stated there were no tramadol or oxycodone orders for the resident in the computer system on August 10. She said she incorrectly assumed the medications were prescribed because the medication cards remained in the cart.
"RN #1 stated she made a mistake and should have verified active orders before administering the tramadol and oxycodone," inspectors wrote.
The facility's own medication administration policy requires nurses to review the medication administration record to identify medications to be administered. The policy specifies that medications are given "as ordered by the physician."
The nurse's assumption proved costly for patient safety. Tramadol is an opioid pain reliever that can cause drowsiness, dizziness, and breathing problems. Oxycodone is a stronger opioid with similar risks, including potential for dependence and dangerous interactions with other medications.
Federal inspectors discovered the violation during a complaint investigation in late September. Their review of the resident's controlled medication utilization records revealed the unauthorized doses on August 10.
The inspection also uncovered evidence of administrative cover-up attempts. While no physician's orders existed for either medication on August 10, backdated orders mysteriously appeared in the computer system nine days later on August 19.
Inspectors found no valid orders for tramadol or oxycodone in the resident's August physician's orders or medication administration record until those backdated entries were created.
The facility's executive director was notified of the violation on September 25 at 4:59 p.m., one day before inspectors completed their investigation.
This medication error represents exactly the type of unnecessary drug administration that federal regulations are designed to prevent. The rule requires nursing homes to ensure each resident's drug regimen is free from unnecessary medications.
The violation affected what inspectors classified as "few" residents, but the impact on Resident #1 was immediate. The person received two doses of powerful opioid medications without medical justification, creating risks for respiratory depression, falls, and drug interactions.
Medication errors in nursing homes have drawn increased federal scrutiny in recent years. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services has emphasized that proper physician ordering and verification procedures are essential safeguards for vulnerable elderly residents.
RN #1's reliance on outdated medication cards rather than active computer orders highlights a dangerous gap in the facility's medication management system. The presence of discontinued medication cards in the cart created a trap that led directly to unauthorized drug administration.
The resident had been through a hospital stay that resulted in medication changes, a common occurrence that requires careful coordination between hospital discharge planners and nursing home staff. The failure to remove outdated medication cards after the resident's return created the conditions for this violation.
Woodstock Valley Health and Rehabilitation must now implement corrective measures to prevent similar incidents. The facility has not yet submitted its plan of correction to address the deficiency identified during the September 26 inspection.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Woodstock Valley Health and Rehabilitation from 2025-09-26 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.
Additional Resources
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