Failure to Respond Timely to Resident Call Lights for Dependent Residents
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to respond to resident call lights in a timely manner for multiple dependent residents who required staff assistance for activities of daily living. One resident with cellulitis, lymphedema, and bowel incontinence, cognitively intact with a BIMS score of 15, reported having to wait more than a few hours, sometimes up to 3 hours, for staff to answer her call light, particularly on night shift. She stated staff were supposed to check and change her every 2 hours, but this did not consistently occur. She also reported that staff often took more than 15 minutes to answer her call light at least once a week, and that staff would sometimes enter, turn off the call light, say they would return, and then never come back. A CNA confirmed that this resident had complained about untimely call light responses and stated that staff were expected to answer call lights within 15 minutes and that any staff member should respond. Another cognitively intact resident, dependent on staff for toileting, transfers, and personal hygiene, experienced prolonged waits for assistance. A family representative reported that this resident was incontinent of urine and had to wait an hour and a half for staff to come to her room, and that staff told the resident they had other patients to care for. The family representative also described an incident where the resident turned on her call light at 8:00 PM to get into bed and was not assisted until 11:00 PM. A CNA reported that this resident complained of being left sitting in her wheelchair until 11:00 PM, with her call light on for 2 hours before staff helped her, usually on second and third shifts. A grievance submitted by the resident documented that she was not put to bed until after 11:00, that she called the nursing station three times, and ultimately had to go into the hall to yell for help. A third cognitively intact resident with cancer, diabetes, cerebral palsy, and dependence on staff for all ADLs except eating had a care plan requiring staff assistance for bed mobility, toileting, and transfers with a mechanical lift. During a continuous observation, this resident’s call light remained activated for 25 minutes before staff responded. During that time, the call light alarm sounded continuously while an RN, the DON, and the Human Resources Coordinator walked past the room multiple times without checking on the resident, and the RN and DON entered another resident’s room without addressing the active call light. The resident later reported that the longest she had waited for a call light response was 3 hours, that many staff had quit, and that she had to wait for someone to answer her call light 3 to 4 times a week, usually for 2 to 3 hours. A fourth resident with mild cognitive impairment (BIMS 12) and dependence on staff for nearly all ADLs activated his call light and was observed waiting 31 minutes before staff entered the room and turned off the call light. During this period, the call light remained on continuously with no staff response until two CNAs finally entered the room. Additional staff interviews revealed inconsistent expectations and practices regarding call light response times. One LPN stated staff were expected to answer call lights within 15 minutes and felt there were enough CNAs but that nurses needed more help. A CNA stated that any staff member could answer a call light but acknowledged that not everyone did, and reported that some residents complained that aides would come in, turn off the call light, say they would return, and then not come back. The facility’s written policy on call lights required all staff who see or hear an activated call light to respond, to listen to the resident’s request, and to notify appropriate personnel if they could not meet the need, but the observed and reported events showed that these procedures were not consistently followed. The DON stated she expected staff to answer call lights within 2 minutes and that any staff member should respond and check on a resident with an active call light rather than walk by. She acknowledged that residents, including those described above, had complained to her about untimely call light responses and about being left up later than desired despite having their call lights on for extended periods. The facility’s own policy outlined a process for responding to call lights, including not promising something staff could not deliver and staying with the resident if assistance was needed, but the documented observations, resident and family reports, and staff interviews demonstrated repeated delays and failures to respond promptly to call lights for multiple dependent residents.
Penalty
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