Inadequate Staffing and Use of Uncertified CNA Students Leading to Unmet Care Needs
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide adequate nursing staff to meet residents’ needs and the use of uncertified CNA students as independent staff. Multiple residents who require substantial or total assistance with ADLs reported prolonged call light response times and unmet toileting and hygiene needs. One resident with spinal stenosis, neuropathy, osteoarthritis, CHF, and other conditions, who requires substantial to maximal assistance for toileting, stated that it took an hour for staff to answer a morning call light when she needed to use the bathroom. She reported that, after waiting and hoping staff would at least transfer her to the toilet, she was unable to wait any longer and had a bowel movement in her pants. Another resident, admitted with multiple myeloma, convulsions, anemia, and other diagnoses, is alert, oriented, has an unsteady gait and poor balance, and is dependent for all care except eating. This resident reported that call light responses on second and third shifts frequently take an hour or more, and that on one occasion the call light was placed on the privacy curtain out of reach, requiring the roommate to retrieve it. A third resident, with flaccid hemiplegia, spinal stenosis, and other conditions, is dependent on staff for most care and reported that there are often not enough CNAs, that there is high turnover, and that showers were missed due to short staffing, including a night when only two CNAs were on second shift and the resident’s shower was postponed. Additional residents and a family member corroborated staffing concerns. One resident stated that staffing is "a joke," reporting that there was only one CNA on a recent Saturday and that call light responses sometimes take up to an hour and a half. Another resident’s daughter reported frequently finding her mother wet and smelling of urine, including on the day of observation when the resident’s pants and wheelchair cushion were wet and odorous, and she described a 20‑minute wait for assistance. A largely independent resident reported that call light responses for requests such as ice water and bedding changes often take over an hour several days per week, and that on third shift there is usually only one CNA, with her incontinent roommate’s bedding often not changed until just before bedtime. Review of staffing schedules for the prior two weeks showed that CNA students were regularly assigned their own halls and counted as CNAs on multiple dates, with schedules frequently showing only 2–3 CNAs on first and second shifts instead of the 4 CNAs staff reported as needed for the south end. CNAs reported that students, who had not completed CNA classes or testing, were given independent assignments after limited clinical sign‑off, and that this contributed to difficulty answering call lights and completing showers. One CNA stated they had given notice due to staffing issues and confirmed that students were being used as regular staff. The ADON and DON acknowledged that typical staffing often ran with fewer CNAs than planned, that students were counted as independent staff once signed off on skills, and that weekends were particularly difficult due to call‑ins. Resident council minutes documented complaints about call light wait times, bathrooms not being cleaned between uses, soiled incontinence products left on the floor, lack of fresh water, and staff saying they would return but not doing so. The facility’s written staffing policy states that the facility will provide sufficient staff with appropriate competencies and skill sets to provide nursing and related services to assure resident safety and to help residents attain or maintain their highest practicable well‑being, based on resident assessments, plans of care, and the facility assessment. Despite this policy, observations, interviews, and record review showed that the facility did not ensure adequate numbers of qualified CNAs on duty and used CNA students as independent staff members before certification, resulting in repeated reports and observations of delayed responses to call lights, missed or delayed showers, and residents remaining wet or soiled.
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.



