Insufficient Nursing Staff Leading to Delayed Care, Missed Appointments, and Unmet Basic Needs
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide sufficient nursing staff to meet residents’ needs in a timely manner, resulting in delays and omissions in care and services. One resident with COPD, diabetes, muscle weakness, hypertension, atherosclerotic heart disease, abnormal lung imaging, and moderate cognitive impairment reported constant pain in his back, chest, and left arm/shoulder and stated he had been told he had spreading cancer. His record showed an oncology referral ordered after abnormal CT and x‑ray results, followed by additional urgent referrals to pulmonology and interventional radiology for a biopsy. The Assistant DON explained that the initial oncology referral was faxed and re‑faxed, but there were long gaps without follow‑up, and when oncology requested pulmonology and biopsy, she faxed those referrals but then, due to short staffing and working daily as a CNA, passed the oncology and interventional radiology information to the Administrator and DON and forgot to follow up on the pulmonology referral and with the interventional radiology coordinator. She also stated that an orthopedic appointment for the resident’s arm fracture was missed because there was no staff available to transport him, the appointment was not rescheduled, and as of the interview the resident had no scheduled appointments with oncology, pulmonology, orthopedics, and had not had a biopsy. The facility also failed to provide basic foot and nail care in a timely manner. One resident with diabetes, Alzheimer’s disease, muscle weakness, and severe cognitive impairment had thick toenails that needed trimming; the LPN stated she did not feel comfortable trimming them and that the resident needed a podiatry referral. Another resident with diabetes, hemiplegia after stroke, and muscle weakness had long toenails and reported painful toes and a need for trimming. A further resident’s toenails were observed to be long and wrapping around the ends of his toes and underneath them; the LPN acknowledged they needed trimming and stated she did not know why this had not been done, adding that the facility no longer had a podiatrist coming in. The ADON stated that nurses are responsible for trimming toenails for diabetic residents, but that it always ended up being her and she had not had time to do it because of short staffing. Hydration needs were not consistently met, with multiple residents reporting that water was not passed regularly. One resident with COPD, emphysema, chronic kidney disease, and intact cognition repeatedly did not have water in her room, stated that water was not passed every day, and said she usually only received water when she asked, questioning what happened to residents who could not ask. Another resident with dehydration, muscle wasting, and moderate cognitive impairment, whose care plan included encouraging hydration to promote skin health, stated she did not get water passed every day and that her daughter began bringing her water because she was not receiving drinks during the day; a family member confirmed this. A further resident with muscle wasting, weakness, and fatigue, care‑planned for potential skin impairment with an intervention to encourage hydration, was repeatedly observed without a water cup and reported that water was only occasionally brought to her. The facility’s “Helping Hand” staff member stated that water was supposed to be passed once in the morning and once in the afternoon, but that many days it had not been passed by the time she arrived because there were not enough CNAs, and that the DON often directed her to pass water because CNAs had not had time. The facility did not respond promptly to call lights, and residents experienced delays in receiving incontinence care and assistance. One resident with hemiplegia after stroke, morbid obesity, weakness, and moderately impaired cognition had an activated call light; the Activities Director entered the room without asking if anything was needed and left with the call light still on. The resident told the surveyor she needed to be cleaned after incontinence. After additional delay, another staff member entered, asked what was needed, and then went to get help; CNAs arrived to provide care, with one CNA stating she was the only aide on the hallway and was training a new aide on her first day. Another resident with chronic kidney disease, anxiety disorder, essential tremors, and moderate cognitive impairment, care‑planned as a fall risk needing prompt response to all requests for assistance, had an activated call light while she waited for an adult brief after incontinence. The call light remained on for over 20 minutes before the ADON responded; the resident stated she always had a long wait and usually waited at least 20 minutes. The ADON stated she responded as quickly as she could but that more CNAs had called in and she was working the floor. Additional care needs were not met due to staffing shortages. One resident with Parkinson’s disease, dementia, muscle weakness, and severely impaired cognition, care‑planned for ADL self‑care deficits, was observed with facial hair and stated staff had not shaved him and that he did not like having facial hair. His roommate, who was also a family member, stated that only one staff member at the facility could shave residents, so he had to wait until she had time. A registered nurse reported that there were not enough CNAs to properly care for residents, that residents complained about waiting to be cleaned after incontinence, that beds were not being stripped and linens changed, and that water was not passed daily because of insufficient CNA staffing. A CNA stated that staffing had been better recently but that there had been times when only two CNAs were in the building, including a weekend when there were only two CNAs for most of the day. The Administrator stated there was no policy related to staffing, and both the Regional Director of Clinical Services and the Administrator confirmed there was no policy related to call lights. The daily census documented 67 residents in the facility.
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.



