In Central Florida communities like Mount Dora, residents often move between facilities, doctors’ offices, and hospital visits. That travel—plus changes in health status—can increase the risk that medication plans aren’t updated quickly or correctly.
Overmedication-related problems in nursing homes may show up as:
- Dose increases that weren’t matched to current health (for example, after kidney function changes or after a fall)
- More frequent administration than ordered due to staffing pressure or unclear protocols
- Failure to adjust after hospital discharge, when medications and diagnoses change
- “Hold/notify” instructions not followed when a resident shows early warning signs
- Medication reconciliation breakdowns, where orders don’t match what ends up on the resident’s medication administration record
When tourism season or event traffic affects staffing and schedules at nearby healthcare employers, families sometimes notice delays in response—especially during busy shifts. That’s why your evidence should focus on timing: what happened, what staff observed, and how quickly clinicians acted.


