Federal inspectors photographed the scene at Woodside Health and Rehabilitation Center on November 12. The first cart held two prefilled syringes of saline solution, a bottle of powdered Cefazolin antibiotic prescribed for a specific resident, and an IV bag of saline — all sitting on top, unlocked.

A second medication cart sat about 10 feet away. Also unlocked. Also unattended.
Licensed Practical Nurse Staff A emerged from a resident's room four minutes later. When inspectors asked about the medications, she admitted leaving them unsecured.
"She said she should have locked them in the medication cart," the inspection report states.
The nurse confirmed the second cart also contained residents' medications and had been left unlocked. When asked why, she said other nurses use the cart too. Then she walked away, leaving both carts unlocked.
The facility's own policy, revised in January 2024, requires all drugs and biologicals to be "stored in locked compartments." Only staff authorized to prepare and administer medications should have access.
Cefazolin is a powerful antibiotic used to treat serious bacterial infections. In the wrong hands or wrong dosage, it can cause severe allergic reactions, kidney damage, and dangerous interactions with other medications.
The next morning, another nurse found the same cart still unlocked.
Licensed Practical Nurse Staff B told inspectors on November 13 that "the medication cart should always be locked when not in use." Yet there it sat, more than 24 hours after the initial discovery, still accessible to anyone.
The unlocked medications violated federal regulations designed to prevent medication theft, accidental poisoning, and unauthorized access by residents with dementia who might consume dangerous substances.
Nursing homes are required to secure all medications because residents often wander hallways, especially those with cognitive impairments. Unlocked carts create opportunities for residents to access medications not prescribed for them, potentially causing overdoses or dangerous drug interactions.
The Cefazolin found on the cart was specifically prescribed for Resident #700. If another resident had accessed and consumed it, the consequences could have been severe, particularly for anyone allergic to penicillin-based antibiotics.
IV solutions like normal saline, while generally safer than antibiotics, can still pose risks if consumed orally or if contaminated supplies lead to infections during medical procedures.
When inspectors informed the Assistant Director of Nursing and Administrator about the unsecured medications that afternoon, neither provided explanation for why the carts had been left unlocked.
The facility policy explicitly states that medications must be stored "in a safe, secure, and orderly manner" and that "only persons authorized to prepare and administer medications have access to locked medications."
Staff clearly understood the requirements. Both nurses interviewed acknowledged the carts should have been locked. Yet the practice continued for more than a day after inspectors first documented it.
The violation occurred in one of three hallways inspectors observed, suggesting the problem may be more widespread than documented in this single incident.
Federal regulations exist because medication security failures have led to serious injuries and deaths in nursing homes nationwide. Residents have accidentally consumed cleaning supplies left in unlocked carts. Others have overdosed on medications not prescribed for them.
The inspection found the facility failed to ensure medications were properly secured, putting residents at risk for unauthorized access to potentially dangerous drugs and medical supplies.
Woodside's medication storage failure represents exactly the kind of basic safety breakdown that federal oversight is designed to prevent. Two carts, two days, multiple staff members — and nobody secured the medications until inspectors arrived to document the violation.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Woodside Health and Rehabilitation Center from 2025-12-01 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.