Failure to Ensure Reliable Call System Functioning for a Resident
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure a consistently functioning resident call system for a resident whose care plan required use of the call bell to request assistance. The resident had acute and chronic respiratory failure with hypoxia, CVA with hemiplegia and hemiparesis, chronic kidney disease, and chronic pain syndrome, but was cognitively intact with adequate hearing and vision and no upper extremity functional impairment. Her care plan directed staff to encourage her to use the call bell for assistance and indicated she required supervision by one staff member for toileting and personal hygiene. During an interview, the resident reported that her call bell did not always work and that she sometimes had to yell from her doorway to get staff attention, stating she had informed aides about the problem multiple times. Surveyor observations confirmed that when the resident pressed her call bell, the small yellow light on the call bell panel in her room illuminated, but the corresponding hall light next to her door appeared white and only showed a very dim yellow color when viewed from close range, not visible from other locations in the hallway. The resident did not have a hand bell available at the time of the initial observations and interviews. Nursing staff acknowledged awareness of intermittent problems with the resident’s call bell signaling, including that the hall light did not always light up, and one nurse stated she had left a note at the receptionist’s desk earlier in the week to request a work order because she did not know how to enter work orders into the electronic system. Multiple nurse aides and the Maintenance Director described ongoing issues with the call light system, particularly on the resident’s hall, including very dim room lights, difficulty seeing which room’s light was activated when multiple call bells were in use, and occasions when the nurse’s station switchboard lights did not reliably indicate which room had called. Staff reported that these problems had been occurring for a couple of months and that the dim lights made it hard to identify the specific room from the nurse’s station or from the far end of the hall. Despite this, there were no documented pending work orders in the electronic system, and the Administrator stated she was unaware of the call bell system problems and relied on staff to submit work orders and maintenance to report trends. This combination of known but uncorrected call system malfunctions and lack of effective reporting resulted in the resident not having a reliably functioning call system as required by her care plan.
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