Failure to Keep Call Lights Within Reach for Multiple Residents
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure that call lights were accessible to multiple residents as required by facility policy and individual care plans. The facility’s “Answering the Call Light” policy directed staff to ensure the call light system was accessible to residents when in bed, on the toilet, in the shower or bathing facility, and from the floor. Despite this, surveyors observed several instances where residents’ call lights were not within reach, and residents were unable to independently summon assistance. These observations occurred across multiple rooms and residents and were corroborated by record reviews showing that care plans required reachable call lights. One resident with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, chronic kidney disease, and dysphagia, who was cognitively intact, was found in her room requesting assistance while lying partially on top of her call light, which she could not reach. She had feces covering her palm and fingers and stated she had already used a napkin to clean herself; the soiled napkin was on her lunch plate. Her call light was not turned on and was not accessible, and no staff were observed nearby until another resident activated their own call light to alert staff. This resident’s ADL and fall care plans required a safe environment, prompt response to requests for assistance, and a workable, reachable call light. Another resident with a history of cerebrovascular disease, dysarthria, cognitive communication deficit, muscle weakness, gait abnormalities, and repeated falls, and who was moderately cognitively impaired, was observed twice with her call light out of reach. On one occasion, she was in bed with a distressed facial expression while her call light cord hung from the far corner of a dresser drawer, beyond her reach. On another occasion, she was asleep in bed while her call light was under a blanket on top of her wheelchair, approximately four feet away on the opposite side of the bedside dresser. Although staff reported that she could use her call light and sometimes slept with it in her hand, observations showed it was not consistently within reach. Her ADL care plan instructed staff to encourage her to use the call light for assistance. Additional residents were also observed without accessible call lights. One resident in a wheelchair next to his bed did not know where his call light was until he located it under the bed; he attempted but was unable to retrieve it from the floor with a reaching device and reported that it sometimes fell off the bed. Another cognitively intact resident requiring moderate ADL assistance was twice observed in her wheelchair with her call light either on the bedside table behind her or on the bed, both times out of her reach, even though her fall risk care plan required a safe environment with a reachable call light. A younger resident with epilepsy, cerebral infarction affecting the right dominant side, blindness, and high fall risk was observed with his call light lying on the floor underneath the bed and out of reach, despite a care plan intervention to ensure the call light was within reach. Another younger resident with a cervical fracture and Huntington’s disease, who required moderate ADL assistance, was found with his call light on the floor under the bed and out of reach; he stated he could use the call light but did not know where it was. These findings collectively demonstrate that the facility did not reasonably accommodate residents’ needs and preferences by ensuring call lights were accessible as required by policy and care plans.
Penalty
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