In a community like Calexico, families frequently spend time coordinating between care providers—sometimes across shifts, sometimes around transportation constraints, and often with limited access to fast updates from the facility. Those realities can make it harder to catch medication problems early.
Overmedication cases commonly start after:
- A discharge or transfer from a hospital or ER, followed by a medication list change that isn’t implemented carefully.
- A sudden behavior shift (increased sleepiness, agitation, confusion) that begins soon after medication administrations.
- Inconsistent monitoring—vital signs, sedation level checks, fall risk assessments, or symptom documentation that doesn’t track the resident’s condition.
- Delayed response to side effects, where staff may continue the regimen instead of notifying the prescriber and adjusting care.
Even when a facility insists “the medication was prescribed,” the question is whether their administration and monitoring met acceptable standards for that resident.


