Failure to Respond Timely to Call Lights and Provide Dignified Incontinence Care
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to honor residents’ rights to a dignified existence, self‑determination, communication, and timely response to call lights. Multiple residents and a discharged complainant resident reported that call lights frequently went unanswered for extended periods, sometimes up to one to two hours, particularly on the evening (2–10 p.m.) and night (10 p.m.–6 a.m.) shifts and on weekends. Residents described being left in urine and feces for long periods, having call lights turned off without care being provided, and needing to resort to phone calls to family members or the nurses’ station to obtain assistance. The facility’s own Resident Rights policy required that employees treat all residents with kindness, respect, and dignity, and federal and state laws guaranteeing residents’ rights to a dignified existence and to be treated with respect, kindness, and dignity. One complainant resident (CR#1), a legally blind individual with diabetes, dependence on renal dialysis, and other conditions, reported that during her short stay she repeatedly waited 30–45 minutes or longer for a CNA on night shift to answer her call light, despite having frequent bowel movements due to antibiotics. She stated that when she questioned the CNA about the delays, he told her he had two hours to answer because he did rounds every two hours, and on one occasion told her to defecate in her brief and wait. She reported sitting in her feces from approximately 1:00 a.m. to 3:00 a.m. and described feeling humiliated and traumatized. Her family member corroborated that CR#1 called throughout the night crying, reported sitting in feces for two hours, and that the CNA made a degrading remark when finally entering the room. Another resident, cognitively intact and totally dependent on staff for most ADLs including incontinence care, reported that staff on the 2–10 p.m. shift and weekends refused to answer her call light for incontinent care. She stated that staff would enter her room, turn off the call light, and leave without changing her brief, leaving her in urine and sometimes feces for long periods, and that this had been an ongoing issue. Her family member stated that the call button was ignored mainly on the 2–10 p.m. shift, that CNAs left the resident lying in a soiled brief, and that staff would turn off the call light and leave without providing care, despite repeated reports to the administrator and nursing staff. A third resident, cognitively intact, wheelchair‑bound, and totally dependent on staff for toileting, hygiene, dressing, and transfers, had a care plan intervention requiring that her call light be within reach and that she receive a prompt response to all requests for assistance. She reported that when she pressed her call light for changing or to be put back to bed, no one came, and that she had waited as long as two hours for a response, leaving her feeling bad when she soiled her brief and had to wait for CNAs to clean her. A fourth cognitively intact resident, totally dependent on staff for most ADLs and with multiple medical conditions including diabetes, neuromuscular bladder dysfunction, and cerebral palsy, also had a care plan intervention requiring prompt response to call lights. He reported that the night shift had a serious issue with answering call lights, with waits of over an hour, and that he had to call the nurse station from his personal cell phone to get someone to respond. The administrator acknowledged receiving middle‑of‑the‑night calls from residents about unanswered call lights and stated he had come to the facility himself to answer call lights, and the DON stated that care should be completed before a call light is turned off and that failure to provide care within standards of practice constitutes neglect. Overall, the survey findings show that for four of five residents reviewed for quality of life, the facility did not provide services and reasonable accommodations to meet residents’ needs and preferences related to timely response to call lights and incontinence care. Residents and family members consistently described prolonged unanswered call lights, staff turning off call lights without providing care, and residents being left soiled for extended periods, in direct conflict with the residents’ care plans and the facility’s Resident Rights policy requiring treatment with kindness, respect, and dignity.
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