Pest Infestation, Structural Disrepair, and Cluttered Grounds Undermine Safe, Homelike Environment
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to maintain a safe, clean, sanitary, pest‑free, and homelike environment in multiple areas inside and outside the building. Surveyors observed the maintenance shed full of debris and discarded items, including a toilet, garbage-filled bin, bathroom commode, wheelchair, an opened safe, industrial portable air conditioning units with visible bio growth, multiple garbage cans, and carts. Additional clutter and discarded items, such as a wheelchair, empty plastic bins, a shop vacuum, garbage can lids, and plastic trays, were found outside the kitchen door. The grounds inspection also revealed a large broken resident-room window, wasp nests between windows and screens, and fallen gutter pieces not properly disposed of. A maintenance assistant reported that the shed was full and they were waiting for direction from the Maintenance Director on what to do with the items. The facility also failed to maintain resident rooms in a clean, pest‑free, and well‑repaired condition. One resident reported waking up to a broken window in January and stated they had informed staff and maintenance since the day it occurred, but the repair had been slow. Another resident, admitted with multiple rib fractures, a history of falling, and chronic pain syndrome and assessed as cognitively intact, had a dead insect on the closet floor, a large hole at the ground corner of the window wall with broken drywall and crumbling baseboard, and small pests under the bed. This resident stated they always see roaches and bugs in the room and on the bed and that staff do nothing about it. A CNA confirmed roaches in the closet and under the bed and, when the bed was moved, multiple pest debris and dust were observed; the CNA stated pests are found in rooms that are untidy or have a lot of food or in rooms with men, and was unaware of the pest sighting log. Another cognitively intact resident’s room was observed to be messy, with scattered shoes, stacked cups, a pest in the resident’s personal care pack, and a large hole of crumbling drywall under the window next to the bed; the resident stated no one cares to fix the room and that roaches are always present. A CNA identified the pest as a roach and stated the room tends to have roaches because of its constant condition. A further cognitively intact resident with highly impaired vision reported living in terror of pests crawling on them in bed, especially because they cannot see them. Surveyors observed multiple pests crawling under this resident’s bedside table, pest traps behind the toilet, and a large gallon bottle of pest killer on the bedside table that the resident stated was brought in by family due to the severity of pests in the room. The resident also reported that the light above the bed only worked halfway and that they had reported this for months without resolution, and that the toilet could not be flushed again for at least 20 minutes after one flush and had been reported to nursing without action. During a room observation with the NHA, Director of Maintenance, and Regional Vice President Officer, multiple roaches were found crawling on the wall and floor after the bedside table was moved, and more roaches were found behind items hanging on the wall. The Transportation Director, who visits the resident daily on angel rounds, stated they had not asked the resident about bugs, had not noticed the large bottle of bug spray, and that bug spray is never to be left in resident rooms due to safety concerns. Staff interviews revealed inconsistent use of the pest sighting log, lack of awareness of the log by some CNAs, and acknowledgment by the Director of Maintenance and NHA that pest traps should not be in resident rooms or the kitchen and that the presence of pests, holes in walls, and scattered items on the grounds were unacceptable. Facility policies on maintenance and pest control required daily rounds to identify hazards and prompt reporting and treatment of pest sightings, which were not consistently followed as evidenced by the observed conditions and staff statements.
Penalty
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