Current through Register Vol. 47, No. 6, September 18, 2024
(1)
Medications shall be prescribed on an individual basis by one who is authorized
by Iowa law to prescribe. (I, II)
a.
Medication orders shall be correctly implemented by qualified personnel.
(II)
b. Qualified staff shall
ensure that residents are able to take their own medication. (I, II)
c. Each physician order allowing a resident
to take their own medications shall specify whether this self-medication shall
be without supervision or under the supervision of qualified staff as defined
in 62.15(2). (I, II)
(2)
Drug administration.
a. A properly trained
person shall be charged with the responsibility of administering nonparenteral
medications.
b. The individual
shall have knowledge of the purpose of the drugs, their dangers, and
contraindications.
c. This person
shall be a licensed nurse or physician or shall have successfully completed a
department-approved medication aide course or passed a department-approved
medication aide challenge examination administered by an area community
college.
d. Prior to taking a
department-approved medication aide course, the individual shall have a letter
of recommendation for admission to the medication aide course from the
employing facility.
e. A person who
is a nursing student or a graduate nurse may take the challenge examination in
place of taking a medication aide course. This individual shall do all of the
following before taking the medication aide challenge examination:
(1) Complete a clinical or nursing theory
course within six months before taking the challenge examination;
(2) Successfully complete a nursing program
pharmacology course within one year before taking the challenge
examination;
(3) Provide to the
community college a written statement from the nursing program's pharmacology
or clinical instructor indicating the individual is competent in medication
administration.
f. A
person who has written documentation of certification as a medication aide in
another state may become a medication aide in Iowa by successfully completing a
department-approved nurse aide competency examination and a medication aide
challenge examination.
The requirements of paragraph "d" of this
subrule do not apply to this individual.
g. Unit dose medication shall remain in the
identifiable unit dose package until given to the resident. (II)
h. Medications that are not contained in unit
dose packaging shall be set up and administered by the same person and must be
administered within one hour of preparation. (II)
i. The person administering medications must
observe and check to make sure the resident swallows oral medications and must
record the date, time, amount and name of each medication given. (II)
j. Injectable medications shall be
administered as permitted by Iowa law by a qualified nurse, physician,
pharmacist, or physician assistant (PA).
k. Residents certified by their physician as
capable of injecting their own insulin may do so. Insulin may be administered
pursuant to
"j " above or as otherwise authorized by the
resident's physician. Authorization by the physician shall:
(1) Be in writing,
(2) Be maintained in the resident's
record,
(3) Be renewed
quarterly,
(4) Include the name of
the individual authorized to administer the insulin,
(5) Include documentation by the physician
that the authorized person is qualified to administer insulin to that resident.
l. Current and accurate
records must be kept on the receipt and disposition of all Schedule II drugs.
(II, III)
(3) For each
resident who is taking medication with or without supervision there shall be
documentation on the individual's record to include:
a. Name of resident, (II, III)
b. Name of drug, dose, and schedule, (II,
III)
c. Method of administration,
(II, III)
d. Drug allergies and
adverse reactions, (I, II)
e.
Special precautions, (I, II)
f.
Documentation of resident's continuing ability to administer own medication.
(I, II)
(4) Medication
counseling shall be provided for all residents in accordance with the IPP on an
ongoing basis and as part of discharge planning unless contraindicated in
writing by the physician with reasons and pursuant to
62.12(2)"c." (II, III)
Each resident shall be given verbal and written information
about all medications the resident is currently using, including
over-the-counter medications. A suggested reference is "USPDI, Advice for the
Patient." (II, III)
The information shall include:
a. Name, reason for, and amount of medication
to be taken; (II)
b. Time
medication is to be taken and the reason that schedule was established;
(II)
c. Possible benefits, risks
and side effects of each medication including over-the-counter medications;
(II)
d. The names of people in the
community qualified to answer questions about medications. (II, III)
e. A list of available resources or agencies
which may assist the resident to obtain medication after discharge.
(Ill)
(5) Drug storage.
a. Residents who have been certified in
writing by the physician as capable of taking their own medications may retain
these medications in their bedrooms. Individual locked storage shall be
utilized. (II, III)
b. Drug storage
for residents who are unable to take their own medications and require
supervision shall meet the following requirements:
(1) Adequate size cabinet with lock which can
be used for storage of drugs, solutions, and prescriptions. A locked drug cart
may be used. (II, III)
(2) A
bathroom shall not be used for drug storage. (II, III)
(3) The drug storage cabinet shall be kept
locked when not in use. (II, III)
(4) The drug storage cabinet key shall be in
the possession of the employee charged with the responsibility of administering
medication. (Ill)
(5) Medications
requiring refrigeration which are stored in a common refrigerator shall be kept
in a locked box properly labeled, and separated from food and other items.
(Ill)
(6) Drugs for external use
shall be stored separately from drugs for internal use. External medications
are those to be applied to the outside of the body and include but are not
limited to salves, ointments, gels, pastes, soaps, baths, and lotions. Internal
medications are those to be applied inside the body or ingested and include but
are not limited to oral and injectable medications, eye drops, ear drops and
suppositories. Also, eye drops and ear drops shall be separated from each other
as well as from other internal and external medications. (II, III)
(7) All potent, poisonous, or caustic
materials shall be stored in a separate room from the medications. (II,
III)
(8) Inspection of the
condition of stored drugs shall be made by the administrator and a licensed
pharmacist not less than once every three months. The inspection shall be
verified by a report signed by the administrator and the pharmacist and filed
with the administrator. The report shall include, but need not be limited to,
certifying absence of the following: expired drugs, deteriorated drugs,
improper labeling, drugs for which there is no current order, and drugs
improperly stored. (Ill)
(9)
Double-locked storage of Schedule II drugs shall not be required under single
unit package drug distribution systems in which the quantity stored does not
exceed a seven-day supply and a missing dose can be readily detected but must
be kept in a locked medication cabinet. Quantities in excess of a seven-day
supply must be double-locked. (II)
c. Bulk supplies of prescription drugs shall
not be kept. (Ill)
(6)
Drug safeguards.
a. All labels on medications
must be legible. If labels are not legible, the medication shall be sent back
to the dispenser as defined in Iowa Code section
147.107
for relabeling. (II, III)
b. The
medication for each resident shall be kept or stored in the original dispensed
containers. (II, III)
c. The
facility shall adopt policies and procedures for the destruction of unused
prescription drugs for residents who have died. The policies and procedures
shall include, but not be limited to, the following: (III)
(1) Drugs shall be destroyed by the person in
charge in the presence of the administrator or the administrator's
designee;
(2) Notation of the
destruction shall be made in the resident's chart, with signatures of the
persons involved in the destruction;
(3) The manner in which the drugs are
disposed of shall be identified (i.e., incinerator, sewer, landfill). (II,
III)
d. The facility
shall also adopt policies and procedures for the disposal of controlled
substances dispensed to residents whose administration has been discontinued by
the prescriber. These policies and procedures shall include, but not be limited
to, the following:
(1) Procedures for
obtaining a release from the resident;
(2) The manner in which the drugs were
destroyed and by whom, including witnesses to the destruction;
(3) Mechanisms for recording the
destruction;
(4) Procedures to be
used when the resident or the conservator or guardian refuses to grant
permission for destruction. (II, III)
e. The facility shall adopt policies and
procedures for the disposal of unused discontinued medication. The procedures
shall include but not be limited to:
(1) A
specified time after which medication must be destroyed, sent back to the
dispenser or placed in long-term storage;
(2) Procedures for obtaining permission of
the resident, or the conservator or guardian;
(3) Procedures to be used when the resident
or conservator or guardian refuses to grant permission for disposal;
(4) Unused discontinued medication shall be
locked and shall be separate from current medication. (II, III)
f. All medication orders which do
not specifically indicate the number of doses to be administered or the length
of time the drug is to be administered shall be stopped automatically after a
given time period. The automatic stop order may vary for different types of
drugs. The facility, in consultation with a physician or pharmacist serving the
home, shall institute policies and provide procedures. These shall be provided
to all prescribers and pharmacists serving the facility and conveniently
located for personnel administering medications. (Ill)
g. Residents shall not keep any prescription
medication in their possession unless the attending physician has certified in
writing on the resident's medical record that the resident is mentally and
physically capable of doing so. Over-the-counter medications may be maintained
provided they are in a locked container and pursuant to subrule 62.16(5). (I,
II)
h. No prescription drugs shall
be administered to a resident without a written order signed by a person
qualified to prescribe the medication and renewed quarterly. (II)
i. Prescription drugs shall be reordered only
with the permission of the attending prescriber. (II, III)
j. No medications prescribed for one resident
may be administered to or allowed in the possession of another. (II)
k. Residents on prescribed medication may
maintain over-the-counter medication pursuant to 62.15(6)"g"
unless contraindicated by the physician. The facility shall request this
information from the physician and document in the resident's record.
(II)
(7) Each facility
shall have policies and procedures established to govern the administration of
prescribed medications to residents on leave from the facility. (Ill)
a. Medication may be issued to residents who
will be on leave from a facility for less than 24 hours. Non-child-resistant
containers may be used. Each container may hold only one medication. A label on
each container shall indicate the date, the resident's name, the facility, the
medication, its strength, dose, and time of administration.
b. Medication for residents on leave from a
facility longer than 24 hours shall be obtained in accordance with requirements
established by the Iowa board of pharmacy examiners.
c. Medication distributed as above may be
issued only by facility personnel responsible for administering
medication.
(8) Each
RCF/PMI that administers controlled substances shall obtain annually a
registration issued by the board of pharmacy pursuant to Iowa Code section
124.302(1).
(Ill)
This rule is intended to implement Iowa Code section
135C.14.