Failure to Maintain Functioning Call Light System for Multiple Dependent Residents
Summary
Surveyors identified that the facility failed to ensure the resident call light system was functioning properly for three residents whose call systems did not illuminate in the hallway when activated. Maintenance purchase records showed light bulbs were ordered in early February with a noted delivery date in February, but the Maintenance Director later clarified the shipment was actually delayed until mid-March. Work orders from January through March contained no entries for call light repairs for these three residents, and the Maintenance Director acknowledged he had no documentation of the dates and times he worked on the call lights and stated he should have kept a record. One resident with inflammatory and immune myopathies, generalized weakness, and significant dependence on staff for most ADLs, including toileting, transfers, and bathing, reported that her call light had not lit up outside her door for about a month. She stated she informed her nurse aide and nurse, and that maintenance told her a part had to be ordered but never returned to fix it; she was given a handheld bell by the Activities Director. During observation, pressing her call light did not illuminate the hallway light, and a handheld bell was seen in her room. The Activities Director reported learning of this issue during a Resident Council meeting, confirmed the call light was not working when she checked it, and stated she verbally notified maintenance and provided the resident with a bell. Two additional residents, both with generalized weakness, mobility impairments, and high dependence on staff for toileting, transfers, and bathing, also had non-functioning call lights that did not illuminate in the hallway when tested, and handheld bells were observed in their rooms. One of these residents, who was moderately cognitively impaired, stated her call light had not worked properly for a few weeks, reported she told a nurse aide, and that a maintenance staff member told her he would get to it later. The other resident was severely cognitively impaired and not interviewable. The nurse aides, nurse, Unit Manager, DON, and Administrator all stated they were unaware that these residents’ call lights were not working, and staff described varying expectations for reporting repairs, including verbal reports to maintenance, use of a maintenance communication book, and use of a web-based building management system, but there was no documented follow-through for these specific call light issues.
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.



