The 5 Most Common Medication Errors in Social Care and How to Stay CQC Compliant
237M
Medication errors occur in NHS & social care each year
~40%
Of CQC "Requires Improvement" ratings involve medication concerns
£98M
Estimated annual cost of medication errors to the NHS
Medication management sits at the very heart of safe social care. Get it wrong even once and the consequences can be catastrophic: harm to a vulnerable person, a failed CQC inspection, or even a safeguarding referral. Yet despite this, medication errors remain one of the most frequently cited concerns in care home inspection reports year after year.
In 2026, CQC inspectors are scrutinising medication practices more closely than ever under the updated Single Assessment Framework. So whether you’re a registered manager, a care home owner, or a senior carer, understanding where errors happen and how to stop them is non-negotiable.
Here are the five most common medication errors in social care, and what your team needs to do to stay fully compliant.
Error 01
Wrong dose or wrong time — the MAR chart gaps
Medication Administration Record (MAR) charts that are incomplete, unsigned, or contain unexplained gaps are one of the first things CQC inspectors check. A missing signature doesn’t just mean poor record-keeping it raises immediate questions about whether a resident actually received their medication at all.
This error often stems not from carelessness but from rushed handovers, staff shortages, and inadequate training on the purpose of accurate MAR documentation. When staff don’t fully understand why the record matters not just that it matters errors creep in.
Fix: Ensure all staff administering medication have completed accredited medication awareness training and understand MAR chart compliance as a core duty not an afterthought.
Error 02
Administration by untrained or insufficiently trained staff
In some care settings, medication is still being administered by workers who have received little more than a brief induction walkthrough. This is a significant compliance risk. CQC’s Regulation 12 (Safe Care and Treatment) is explicit: providers must ensure staff have the qualifications, competence, and training to administer medicines safely.
This doesn’t just apply to registered nurses. Support workers and care assistants who administer medication must have documented, up-to-date training and that training must be refreshed regularly. A one-off session from three years ago won’t satisfy an inspector in 2026.
Fix: Care Skills UK’s Medication Awareness training is CPD accredited, takes just 2 hours online, and gives staff an instant digital certificate ideal for keeping compliance records audit-ready.
Error 03
Poor storage and handling of medicines
Medications stored at incorrect temperatures, locked cabinets left unsecured, controlled drugs not counted and witnessed these are textbook inspection failures that crop up repeatedly in CQC reports. The Misuse of Drugs Regulations 2001 and associated guidance set out clear requirements for controlled drug storage, and non-compliance carries serious legal risk beyond just a rating downgrade.
Beyond controlled drugs, general medication storage is often overlooked: out-of-date medicines left in trolleys, creams without opened dates, and no system for disposal of returned or unused medications.
Fix: Conduct a monthly medication audit covering storage temperatures, controlled drug registers, expiry dates, and disposal records. Make this a standing agenda item at team meetings.
Error 04
Failure to follow prescriber instructions or account for PRN medicines
“As required” (PRN) medications are consistently mishandled in social care settings. Staff often aren’t clear on the thresholds for administering PRN medication when should a pain relief be given? What signs indicate it’s needed? Without clear protocols and trained staff, PRN medicines are either over-administered or withheld when a resident genuinely needs them.
Similarly, dose changes from GPs or pharmacists are sometimes not communicated effectively to all staff, meaning a carer administers the old dose simply because no one updated the MAR chart or briefed the team during handover.
Fix: Implement written PRN protocols for every resident with as-required medication. All changes from prescribers must be reflected on the MAR chart before the next administration without exception.
Error 05
Lack of person-centred medication consent and capacity assessment
This is perhaps the most underappreciated risk. Under the Mental Capacity Act 2005, if a resident lacks capacity, there must be a documented best interests decision in place for their medication. Care providers frequently fail not because medication was administered incorrectly, but because consent or capacity was never properly assessed or recorded.
CQC inspectors increasingly look for evidence that medication is being given with residents, not just to them. Where a resident has capacity, their informed consent must be documented. Where capacity is in question, the process must follow the MCA framework.
Fix: Carry out and document capacity assessments for medication consent as part of the care planning process — and review them whenever a resident’s condition changes significantly.
CQC 2026 INSPECTION FOCUS
Under the Single Assessment Framework, inspectors assess medication management under the “Safe” quality statement. Evidence of staff training records, up-to-date MAR charts, storage audits, and consent documentation are all key areas of scrutiny. Providers rated “Requires Improvement” or “Inadequate” on medication are increasingly subject to rapid re-inspection timelines.
What does good medication management actually look like?
Beyond avoiding the errors above, truly CQC-compliant medication management in 2026 means having a whole-team culture where safety is embedded not just a policy that sits in a folder. Inspectors want to see that staff at every level understand their responsibilities, that managers audit regularly, and that learning from incidents is documented and acted upon.
It also means investing in the right training. Not tick-box e-learning that staff click through in minutes, but accredited, scenario-based training that builds genuine competence. Staff who understand the why behind medication protocols the risks, the regulations, the impact on residents make far fewer errors than those who’ve simply been told what to do.
Your CQC-ready medication compliance checklist
- All medication-administering staff hold current, accredited training certificates
- MAR charts are completed accurately at every administration — no unsigned gaps
- Monthly medication audits covering storage, expiry dates, and disposal are documented
- PRN protocols are written, resident-specific, and understood by all staff
- Capacity and consent for medication is assessed, recorded, and reviewed regularly
- Controlled drug registers are completed, witnessed, and reconciled at every shift
- Medication errors are reported, investigated, and used as learning — not hidden
The bottom line
Medication errors in social care are rarely the result of bad intentions. They’re the result of gaps in training, systems, and oversight — all of which are fixable. The care providers who consistently achieve “Good” and “Outstanding” CQC ratings aren’t doing anything magical: they’ve built teams who are well-trained, well-supported, and clear on their responsibilities.
If your team’s medication training records aren’t fully up to date — or you’re not confident every staff member could explain their role in safe medication management — now is the time to act. Don’t wait for an inspection to find the gaps for you. Visit Care Skills Training UK to explore the full range of accredited healthcare training available for your team.
Get your team’s medication training sorted today
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