Failure to Ensure Accessible and Appropriate Call Lights for Multiple Residents
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to reasonably accommodate resident needs and ensure call lights were accessible and appropriate for residents’ functional abilities. One resident with hemiplegia, aphasia, dysphagia, functional quadriplegia, and severe cognitive impairment was care planned as dependent for mobility and ADLs, with an intervention for the call bell to be within reach due to a history of falls and impaired mobility. Multiple observations on different days showed this resident in bed with the traditional call bell cord wrapped on the right side rail and the button positioned between the mattress and side rail, not within reach. When CNAs placed the call bell in the resident’s left hand and verbally prompted her to use it, she repeatedly shook the device and was unable to press the button to trigger assistance. The DON acknowledged the resident’s paralysis on one side, stated she believed the resident could use a padded/tap-activated call bell, and confirmed that the resident did not have a call bell in place that accommodated her functional needs at that time. Additional deficiencies were identified for four other residents whose call lights were not within reach despite care plans indicating they were at risk for falls with interventions including keeping the call light within reach. One resident, admitted with dementia, depression, psychosis, and other conditions, required assistance with toileting, bathing, dressing, and bed mobility; observations showed this resident asleep in bed with the call light lying on the floor at the foot of the bed on two occasions, not within reach. A CNA confirmed the call light was not within reach and explained that the distance from the wall unit to the head of the bed prevented proper placement without a clamp, and the DON confirmed the call light should have been within reach. Another resident with hemiplegia, aphasia, depression, anxiety, and dependence for transfers and toileting was observed lying in bed with the call light placed on top of a mini fridge at the foot of the bed on two separate observations; the resident stated he could not reach his call light and relied on his roommate to press it for assistance, and an LPN confirmed the call light was not within reach. Further observations showed a resident with diabetes, dementia with mood disturbance, heart failure, CKD, and mobility needs requiring a cane and assistance with ADLs sitting on the side of the bed while the call light was on the opposite side and not within reach. Two LPNs confirmed that this resident’s call light was not within reach and attributed the problem to the bed being too far from the call light. Another resident with seizures, CHF, CKD, generalized muscle weakness, debility, and an above-knee amputation, who required substantial to total assistance for transfers and toileting, was observed lying in bed with the call bell hanging on the wall and not within reach. An LPN confirmed this call bell was not within reach. The DON and a corporate RN later confirmed that each resident should have a call light within reach, but at the time of surveyor observations, these residents did not have accessible or appropriately adapted call systems as required by their assessed needs and care plans.
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