Resident CR1 returned to Jersey Shore Skilled Nursing and Rehabilitation Center on August 22, 2025, from the hospital where doctors had treated a left foot abscess. The patient came back with a PICC line inserted in their arm for long-term intravenous medication delivery.

Hospital physicians had prescribed two powerful antibiotics before discharge. Vancomycin, administered intravenously every 24 hours until September 27, and Levofloxacin, a broad-spectrum antibiotic taken orally every 48 hours. The facility's own physician documented this treatment plan at 8:02 PM on admission day, noting the resident should continue both medications as directed.
Nobody gave either medication.
Vancomycin wasn't ordered until August 25 — three days after admission. Staff didn't administer the first dose until that same day. Levofloxacin wasn't ordered until August 27 and first given August 28, six full days after the resident arrived needing immediate antibiotic treatment.
The delay had measurable consequences. When staff finally drew blood to check Vancomycin levels on August 25, the concentration measured 9 micrograms per milliliter — below the minimum effective level of 10 needed to fight infection.
A physician's note from August 27 revealed the cascade of communication failures that left the infected resident without medication. Nursing staff contacted the hospital discharge physician on August 22 about the PICC line, asking which IV antibiotic to give. They were told to check with the discharging physician about the specific medication.
The IV antibiotic order was never transcribed. The resident missed doses on August 23 and 24.
The physician's note blamed unclear documentation in the hospital discharge instructions for the Vancomycin delay. But it offered no explanation for why Levofloxacin — the oral antibiotic — also went unordered for nearly a week.
Federal inspectors discovered a critical piece of missing information during their October review. Page 9 of the 23-page hospital discharge document was missing entirely. Facility staff told inspectors this page would have contained the IV medication orders and Levofloxacin prescription details.
Whether that page was available when the resident arrived remains unknown. Facility staff couldn't determine if they received incomplete paperwork or lost the page after admission.
The medication failures extended beyond this single case. Inspectors found timing discrepancies in how staff documented medication administration for another resident. Resident 3 was permitted to self-administer medications, but staff recorded the time they provided pills to the resident rather than when the resident actually took them.
The Director of Nursing, interviewed at 2:30 PM on October 1, confirmed this practice. She explained that documentation times reflected when staff delivered medications, not when residents consumed them or refused treatment.
This documentation method creates gaps in the medical record. If a resident refuses medication or isn't available when staff arrive, the recorded time doesn't reflect what actually happened with the prescribed treatment.
Both cases illustrate breakdowns in the facility's medication management systems. For Resident CR1, the failure occurred at the most critical juncture — the transition from hospital to nursing home care when patients are most vulnerable to medical errors.
The resident with the foot abscess required aggressive antibiotic treatment to prevent the infection from spreading or becoming resistant to treatment. Missing multiple doses of both prescribed antibiotics during the crucial first week of treatment could have allowed the infection to worsen or develop resistance.
PICC lines are typically installed for patients requiring weeks or months of intravenous antibiotic therapy. The specialized equipment signals the severity of the infection and the importance of maintaining consistent medication levels in the bloodstream.
Inspectors reviewed their findings with the Nursing Home Administrator and Director of Nursing at 3:30 PM on October 1. The facility violated Pennsylvania regulations governing pharmacy services and nursing care standards.
The inspection occurred following a complaint, suggesting someone familiar with the facility's operations reported concerns about medication management practices.
For Resident CR1, six days passed between hospital discharge and receiving the first prescribed antibiotic dose. The blood test confirming subtherapeutic drug levels provided clinical evidence that the delay compromised treatment effectiveness for a patient fighting a serious bacterial infection.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Jersey Shore Skilled Nursing and Rehabilitation Ce from 2025-10-01 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.
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