Clayton Rehabilitation and Healthcare Center documented administering multiple doses of Amoxicillin-Potassium Clavulanate 875 mg to Resident #26, but the number of pills given didn't match what remained in the facility's medication supply. The discrepancy raised questions about whether the resident actually received the antibiotic prescribed to prevent the bacterial infection from worsening.

The facility's wound physician had examined Resident #26 on October 17 and found the pressure wound on the resident's right hip was completely infected. He immediately ordered the antibiotic to be given twice daily, with the first dose starting that same evening.
"It was his expectation that Resident #26 received his Amoxicillin-Potassium Clavulanate 875 mg as ordered to prevent further worsening of the bacterial infection in the pressure wound," inspectors wrote.
But when investigators tried to reconcile the medication records, the numbers didn't add up.
The facility had received the resident's antibiotic supply on October 17, the same day the wound physician placed the order. Nurses documented giving multiple doses over the following days. Yet when inspectors counted what remained in the antibiotic medication package, there should have been fewer pills if the documented doses had actually been administered.
The Regional Clinical Director acknowledged the problem during an interview on October 24. She told inspectors the facility couldn't identify any other source nurses could have used to obtain the antibiotic besides the facility's backup medication supply and the resident's own supply delivered on October 17.
No other residents were receiving the same antibiotic during the time Resident #26 was prescribed the medication, eliminating the possibility of cross-contamination between patient supplies.
"It was the Regional Clinical Director's expectation that the number of tablets documented as administered should be reconcilable with the number removed from the resident's supply," the inspection report stated.
The medication discrepancy represented a breakdown in one of nursing homes' most basic responsibilities: ensuring residents receive prescribed medications accurately and on schedule. For a resident with an infected wound, missing antibiotic doses could allow a bacterial infection to spread or worsen.
Federal regulations require nursing homes to maintain detailed medication administration records that accurately reflect what residents actually receive. The inability to reconcile documented doses with remaining medication suggests either falsified records or systematic medication errors.
Pressure wounds, also known as bedsores, develop when residents remain in one position too long without proper repositioning. When these wounds become infected, prompt antibiotic treatment is essential to prevent complications that can include sepsis or bone infection.
The wound physician's decision to start antibiotics immediately indicated the severity of Resident #26's condition. An infected pressure wound on the hip, a weight-bearing area, requires aggressive treatment to prevent the infection from spreading to underlying bone or entering the bloodstream.
The facility's inability to account for the missing medication doses occurred despite having multiple systems in place to track controlled substances and prescription medications. Nursing homes typically maintain locked medication rooms, require double-counting of certain drugs, and document each dose given to residents.
When inspectors interviewed the wound physician by phone on October 24, he emphasized his expectation that the resident would receive the prescribed antibiotic exactly as ordered. The physician had examined the infected wound and determined that twice-daily dosing was necessary to combat the bacterial infection.
The medication administration discrepancy violated federal standards requiring nursing homes to ensure residents receive medications as prescribed and to maintain accurate records of all doses given. The violation carried a determination of minimal harm or potential for actual harm, affecting few residents.
Clayton Rehabilitation's failure to reconcile its medication records raised broader questions about the facility's medication management systems and whether other residents might have experienced similar discrepancies between documented and actual medication administration.
For Resident #26, the uncertainty about whether prescribed antibiotics were actually administered meant the infected pressure wound may not have received the aggressive treatment the wound physician deemed necessary to prevent further deterioration.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Clayton Rehabilitation and Healthcare Center from 2025-10-30 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.
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