Medication problems in long-term care rarely come with one obvious “smoking gun.” Instead, they often show up through patterns that are easy for families to miss—especially when you’re trying to coordinate care between facilities.
In the Red Bank area, it’s common for residents to cycle through different settings during a decline: a nursing home, a rehabilitation unit, an emergency visit, then back to long-term care. Each handoff can introduce gaps in medication reconciliation and documentation, including:
- Discharge instructions that don’t match the facility’s current medication list
- Timing differences between what was ordered and what was administered
- Delays in adjusting medications after side effects appear
- Missed updates to care plans when a resident’s cognition or mobility changes
When those gaps exist, families may be left asking the same question: If the warning signs were there, why didn’t the facility act faster?


