Insufficient Nursing Staff Leading to Delayed Call Responses, Missed Care, and Medication Issues
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide sufficient and qualified nursing staff to meet residents’ needs, resulting in prolonged call light response times, delayed assistance with activities of daily living (ADLs), missed or delayed restorative and shower care, and untimely medication administration. The facility assessment dated 04/01/2026 identified a need for 5 RNs, 5 LPNs, 5 NACs, and 2 restorative aides but did not include shower aides. Review of staffing patterns for the prior 31 days showed wide variation in NAC coverage, with only 4 or 5 NACs on duty for 6 of 31 days. Restorative aides reported being pulled from restorative programs to work the floor, and staff interviews confirmed ongoing short staffing, frequent call-outs, and the absence of dedicated shower aides, leaving floor staff responsible for multiple showers in addition to caring for 10–11 residents each. Multiple residents reported long call light response times, particularly around shift changes and staff breaks. One resident stated they routinely waited over 30 minutes at shift change and described slipping in the bathroom after deciding not to wait any longer for help, then contacting their surgeon for an x-ray due to foot pain. Another resident reported experiencing falls and described call light waits longer than 30 minutes during staff breaks, leading to fear of incontinent episodes. Several residents described waiting 20–60 minutes or longer for assistance, including one who said they waited hours when they first arrived, and another who stated that if they were having a heart attack, the long wait at shift change would not be good. Observations by surveyors showed a call light activated at 9:50 AM with multiple staff walking past it; the light did not receive a response until 10:12 AM and was turned off at 10:14 AM. Family members and grievances corroborated these concerns. One family member reported finding their spouse covered in bowel movement and waiting about 40 minutes after activating the call light. Several family members stated there were noticeably more staff present when state surveyors were in the building and that staffing dropped significantly after surveyors left, describing the facility as a “ghost town.” Another family reported having a relative from another floor come up to check on a resident because they did not receive enough help, and described calling the nurses’ station multiple times with no answer, then calling the resident’s cell phone and using speakerphone so the resident could call for help. Grievances documented residents waiting 40 minutes to two hours for call light responses, including one resident who reported being told by a NAC that they had been on break and that there was no other NAC to cover, and another who reported that full urinals were not emptied, resulting in them wetting their pants. Resident council minutes and a resident council meeting further detailed the impact of insufficient staffing. Residents reported call lights not being answered timely, residents falling and remaining on the floor for extended periods, and residents pulling call lights out of the wall or walking down the hall partially undressed to get help. One resident described hearing another resident yelling for help and finding them hanging off the bed with their head nearly to the floor; they held the resident’s head until staff arrived, who then stated the resident was not their assignment. Residents also reported that staff passing meal trays did not respond to call lights and said they could not provide care until everyone was done eating, and that one resident remained soiled and in a wheelchair from 6:00 PM to 9:00 PM before being changed. Medication administration and restorative care were also affected. One resident reported that nurses gave their dinner and bedtime medications together despite their objections, and several residents stated that both agency and facility nurses left medications at the bedside without observing ingestion. A restorative aide reported that there were many more restorative programs now, but restorative staff were frequently pulled to work the floor, especially in the prior month, resulting in missed restorative programs. Staff confirmed that showers were missed due to the lack of shower aides and that NACs were expected to complete multiple showers in addition to their regular assignments. During an interview, the RCM stated the facility was still short staffed, that call-outs were a problem, and that staff morale was down after schedule changes. When asked if the QAPI committee was aware of staffing issues, the Administrator initially responded, “Really?” and then said, “Let’s move on,” without providing additional information.
Penalty
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