In Washington, UT, many residents and families rely on coordinated care—clinic visits, pharmacy refills, and medication plan updates that may happen across different days and shifts. That coordination can create opportunity for gaps, especially when:
- A medication is adjusted after a provider visit and staff don’t fully reconcile the updated instructions.
- A resident returns from an appointment and the medication schedule isn’t implemented consistently.
- Behavioral changes show up during evenings or weekends, when documentation and escalation may be delayed.
When harm happens, the earliest records matter most: medication administration logs, nursing notes, physician orders, incident reports, and hospital records that capture the resident’s condition after the change.


