The September 29 complaint investigation at Sterling Oaks Rehabilitation found staff failed to follow physician parameters for withholding blood pressure medications. When asked about the incident, a nurse admitted she "must pay more attention and always document when medications were given or not given."

Resident #2's blood pressure readings consistently ran low. Her doctor had established specific parameters requiring nurses to hold the medication when readings fell within certain ranges. But staff gave the medication anyway.
The facility's Assistant Director of Nursing explained the medical risks during the inspection. "If the medication was given, when it was supposed to be held the blood pressure could drop lower, and the residents could get dizzy and fall," she said.
The nursing supervisor described what should have happened instead. Blood pressure medication should not be administered when readings fall within the physician's hold parameters. When medications are withheld, staff must document both the decision and the medical reason.
"Her expectations of the staff were to ensure the physician's orders were followed and documented in the clinical records," inspectors noted.
The facility's own policy, dated May 5, 2023, requires qualified licensed nurses to obtain and transcribe physician orders according to practice guidelines. The policy specifically states that facilities "should not administer medications or biologicals except upon the order of a physician/prescriber lawfully authorized to prescribe them."
Those physician orders include "parameters for holding medication if indicated."
But documentation problems went beyond the medication error itself. The nurse involved acknowledged she had failed to properly record when medications were given or not given, creating gaps in the clinical record that could affect future care decisions.
The Assistant Director of Nursing outlined the facility's response plan during the inspection interview. Staff would receive in-service training on checking blood pressures and supervising blood pressure medication administration. Additional training would focus on proper documentation in residents' clinical records.
The violation affected few residents but represented what inspectors classified as minimal harm or potential for actual harm. Blood pressure medications are among the most commonly prescribed drugs in nursing homes, making proper administration protocols critical for resident safety.
Low blood pressure, or hypotension, can cause dizziness, fainting, and falls in elderly residents. When combined with blood pressure medications given inappropriately, the effects can be severe. Falls represent one of the leading causes of injury and death in nursing home settings.
The facility's admission procedures require nurses to complete medication regimen reviews from transfer records and place calls to physicians to confirm orders. But the breakdown occurred during daily medication administration, where staff failed to check current blood pressure readings against physician parameters before giving the drugs.
Sterling Oaks operates as a rehabilitation facility in Katy, serving residents who require both short-term recovery services and longer-term care. The facility is located on Lakecrest Manor Drive in the rapidly growing suburb west of Houston.
The inspection focused specifically on medication administration practices following the complaint. Federal inspectors examined clinical records, interviewed nursing staff, and reviewed the facility's policies governing physician orders and medication management.
The nurse's admission that she needed to "pay more attention" suggested the medication error may not have been an isolated incident. Her acknowledgment of documentation failures indicated systemic problems with record-keeping that could affect multiple residents.
Proper blood pressure monitoring requires checking readings before each dose, comparing those readings to physician parameters, and making real-time decisions about whether to administer or hold medications. The process demands both clinical judgment and careful documentation.
The facility's correction plan emphasized training and supervision, but the inspection report provided no timeline for implementation or measures for ensuring compliance. The Assistant Director of Nursing's promise to "in-service the staff" represented the facility's primary response to the violation.
For Resident #2, the medication error meant receiving drugs that could have caused dangerous blood pressure drops. Her consistently low readings made her particularly vulnerable to the effects of inappropriate medication administration.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Sterling Oaks Rehabilitation from 2025-09-29 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.