All medication administration must be charted in the electronic record at the time of administration, with the five rights verified and witnessed where required by protocol. Controlled-substance counts must be reconciled at each shift change. Accurate, contemporaneous documentation is a patient-safety requirement and a condition of licensure-aligned practice.
Two medication administrations on the 7a–7p shift were charted retroactively at end of shift rather than at the time of administration. Addressed in a documented coaching conversation.
A controlled-substance count at shift change was not reconciled and signed before leaving the unit, requiring the oncoming nurse to flag and resolve the discrepancy.
A scheduled analgesic for a post-operative patient was administered but not documented in the medication record for over four hours, creating a risk of a duplicate dose during a care handoff.
Effective immediately, all medication administration must be charted contemporaneously at the time of administration, and all controlled-substance counts must be reconciled and signed before leaving the unit at shift change, without exception. Any deviation must be self-reported to the charge nurse at the time it occurs.
Because this is the third documented incident of the same nature and follows a prior written warning, no further progressive step remains. Any further violation of the medication-administration or documentation standards described above, of any severity, will result in the termination of your employment. This notice is not a performance-improvement plan; it is a final warning that the conduct must stop immediately and permanently.