Failure to Provide Private Telephone Access for Residents
Summary
The facility failed to ensure residents had reasonable access to and privacy in their use of telephones, affecting three sampled residents. Resident 1, admitted with diagnoses including diabetes mellitus and chronic kidney disease, had intact cognition and required substantial assistance with transfers and walking. Resident 3, with diabetes mellitus and atrial fibrillation, had mildly impaired cognition and required supervision or moderate assistance with mobility. Resident 2, with heart failure and chronic kidney disease, had moderately impaired cognition and was dependent on staff for transfers. These residents relied on staff and facility resources to access telephones for personal communication. Staff interviews and observations showed that, following a change in facility ownership, the previous owner confiscated all work phones and residents’ phones for private use, and the facility no longer had a dedicated resident cell phone. RN 1 reported that residents who were able to ambulate used the phone at the nursing station, while bedbound residents used the nursing staff’s work cell phone, which contained sensitive information about many residents. Because of this, staff remained with residents during calls to prevent access to confidential information on the device, acknowledging that this could be a violation of privacy since staff could hear the conversations, even though they tried not to listen. Resident interviews and direct observations confirmed the lack of private telephone access. Resident 2, who was bedbound, stated she previously spoke with her daughter weekly but had been unable to do so for a couple of months because the facility no longer allowed her to use the phone and she could not get out of bed to reach the nursing station phone. Resident 3 stated that when he needed to use the phone, he did so at the nursing station and had conversations in front of staff. Resident 1 was observed using the phone at the nursing station while RN 1 sat nearby. The Social Services Director and the Administrator both confirmed that, as an interim measure, residents were using the RN supervisor’s work cell phone under staff monitoring, which prevented residents from having private telephone conversations. Facility policies on confidentiality and resident rights stated that residents would have their written and telephone communications protected and would have access to a telephone with privacy, which was not being met in these instances. These failures resulted in Resident's 1, 2, and 3 being unable to make personal phone calls without staff's presence and monitoring, violating their rights to private communication. These deficient practices had the potential to cause psychosocial harm, including fear of being overheard when discussing personal information, and feelings of distress and isolation due to lack of communication with family.
Penalty
Resources
Below are regulatory guidelines relevant to this citation:
Trusted data from CMS and state health departments
Every citation, penalty and Plan of Correction is sourced from public CMS records (latest release June 24, 2026) and official state health department websites — never guesswork.
Trusted by long-term care providers and associations.



