Administrative Instability and Inadequate Oversight Leading to Widespread Care Failures
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to be administered in a manner that enabled effective and efficient use of resources to attain or maintain the highest practicable physical, mental, and psychosocial well-being of each resident. Surveyors identified frequent turnover in key leadership positions, including five administrators since June 2023 and seven DONs since June 2025, with no additional information provided by current leadership to demonstrate effective administrative systems. The facility assessment documented that 27.9% of residents were clinically complex and that the facility provided a wide range of required services, but the staffing assessment was not specific regarding the number of staff needed to meet residents’ total care needs. Resident council minutes over multiple months documented ongoing concerns about delayed call light response, lack of CNA availability for showers, and CNAs using phones instead of assisting residents. Residents and families reported repeated concerns related to inadequate staffing and delayed care. Multiple residents stated that there were not enough staff, especially at night and on weekends, and that call lights could take from 30 minutes to several hours to be answered. One resident reported waiting five hours for a call light to be answered, and another resident’s family member reported finding the resident lying on a mattress with minimal bedding and no staff coming in to turn, reposition, or get the resident up. In a special resident council meeting, residents described having to help other residents who were sliding out of chairs because staff were not present, and one resident kept a personal calendar of showers because the shower schedule was not being followed. Staff interviews corroborated these concerns, with LPN supervisors and CNAs reporting that there were often only one or very few CNAs on certain halls or shifts, making it difficult to complete showers, incontinence care, turning and repositioning, and timely call light response. Staff also reported that mechanical lift transfers were sometimes performed by one person despite the requirement for two staff. As a result of the lack of consistent and necessary administrative oversight and frequent leadership changes, multiple care and treatment failures were identified across several regulatory areas. One resident with lethargy and a critically elevated blood glucose had delayed reassessment and continued limited intake, later becoming unresponsive and requiring hospital admission with diagnoses including severe sepsis with septic shock, acute encephalopathy, acute kidney injury, hyperglycemia, urinary tract infection, and hypernatremia, and subsequently returned with hospice and later died. Another resident, cognitively impaired and requiring substantial assistance with toileting and assessed as incontinent, had no documented bowel movement for several days, was later hospitalized, and was found on CT scan to have a moderately stool-distended rectal vault with developing stercoral colitis, requiring disimpaction and an 11-day hospital stay; this same resident also had deficiencies in implementation of urinary catheter orders and individualized catheter care planning. Additional findings included failures to ensure treatments for conditions such as CHF, vascular wounds, UTIs, and glaucoma; failures to provide necessary ADL care for residents unable to perform self-care, including assistance with eating, nail care, and bathing/showering; failures to provide ordered pressure ulcer care; failures in accurate and timely weight monitoring leading to an undetected significant weight loss; and failures in the infection prevention and control program for multiple residents. The administrator job description indicated responsibilities for supporting recruitment and retention to lower turnover and developing a strong management team, but the survey findings showed that these administrative functions were not effectively carried out.
Penalty
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