Widespread Environmental, Pest, and Cleanliness Failures Across All Units
Summary
Facility staff failed to maintain a safe, clean, comfortable, and homelike environment across all three units, as evidenced by widespread pest infestations, environmental disrepair, and unclean resident care areas. Multiple cognitively intact residents reported large flying roaches in their rooms and throughout the building, including on walls and ceilings, making it difficult to sleep and causing some to question whether they should avoid showering. Residents also reported that pest control had not treated their rooms. Surveyors directly observed roaches in resident bathrooms and rooms, including live and dead roaches on floors, and facility leadership acknowledged that a gap at a courtyard threshold served as an entry point for bugs. A wasp nest with egg sacs and a live wasp was observed between a resident room window and screen, with a gap allowing air and insects into the room; residents stated the nest had been present for about three weeks and that staff were aware. The physical environment on the Fine Unit and other areas was in disrepair and not maintained in a clean or homelike condition. Numerous ceiling tiles in halls and resident rooms were stained, bulging, loose, or missing, including heavily stained tiles over residents’ beds. Walls, doors, and thresholds were damaged, including a wall in disrepair between rooms, a resident room door with frayed and swollen edging, and a courtyard threshold removed in a way that left a gap and uneven flooring. Bathrooms had leaking toilet cisterns with pans catching actively dripping water, heavily stained and loose tiles, and containers under valves collecting standing water that staff acknowledged likely attracted roaches. In several rooms, floors were described and observed as filthy, sticky, and covered with trash, food debris, and accumulated brown or yellowish substances on floors, walls, and cove bases. In at least two rooms, staff and the Housekeeping Director stated that residents frequently spit on the floor, and that encrusted brown substances could not be removed with current cleaning methods. Resident rooms on the Fine Unit were small, with many semi-private rooms having one bed abutted directly against the wall near the door, leaving no space on one side of the bed. Residents were observed lying in beds with body parts resting on the walls, and stains were noted on walls where residents’ heads rested. Staff, including CNAs and housekeeping, reported difficulty providing care and cleaning around beds placed against walls, and a family member reported feeling cramped and lacking privacy when visiting a loved one in such a room. Visitors and residents commented that the Fine Unit rooms were much smaller and older than rooms on other units and that they had seen roaches in the building. The State Life Safety Inspector stated that beds should not be abutted against the wall, that the rooms were small, and that there should be enough room for stretchers to enter to assist either resident in an emergency. Shared and unit shower rooms were observed to be cluttered and unclean. On one unit, the shower room bathroom contained multiple shower chairs, a pair of shoes on the floor, a toilet covered in black plastic with a sign indicating it needed repair or replacement, and used latex gloves on the plastic and floor. A commode bucket with dried brown-looking substance and used items was found on a commode chair, and the shower area had brown substances on walls and floors, wet hair near the drain, and a wet washcloth on a shower bed. On another unit, the shower room was full of clutter, including shower chairs with bags of soiled clothing, and a bathtub filled with incontinence products, towels, shirts, dust, and sheets. The shower floor and tiles appeared soiled and dusty, water was constantly dripping from the shower head, and a used saturated dressing with pink and yellow secretions was observed at the shower drain. The water closet in that shower room was extremely cluttered, and the toilet was sealed with plastic and tape with an “out of order” note. Hallways and common areas were not maintained free of clutter and obstructions. On the Fine Unit, furniture, equipment, and supplies were stored on both sides of a hallway near resident rooms, including a mattress, rollator, multiple cardboard boxes, pallets of boxed items, a large trash can, and a rolling hamper. On another hall, wheelchairs, a shower bed, chairs, oxygen concentrators, mats, positioning devices, a laundry cart, a Hoyer lift, and a wheelchair were stored in the corridor across from resident rooms and near a shower room. A family member reported concern that hallway clutter would make it hard to evacuate a resident in an emergency and that her visually impaired loved one, who ambulates and may wander, could fall or be injured due to the clutter. Emergency call systems were not consistently functional in resident-accessible bathrooms. In a shared bathroom used by several rooms, including one resident who ambulated independently to the bathroom, the emergency alarm pull cord did not light up or send an alert to the nurse’s station when tested on two separate days. A CNA at the nurse’s station stated he was not aware whether the emergency pull-cord alarm sent an alert. This non-operable emergency call system remained in use by a resident who was observed throughout the survey ambulating independently to that restroom. Individual resident rooms showed repeated failures to maintain cleanliness and a homelike environment. One resident’s room was repeatedly observed with a filthy floor, trash debris, and an exposed outlet with sharp edges near the HVAC unit; a reddish substance resembling vomit was seen on the floor until housekeeping was called to clean it. Another resident’s room had a sticky floor, food accumulated around the perimeter, dark yellow/brown substances on the floor, and copious brown drippage behind the headboard down to the floor; the resident stated she had informed housekeeping about the dirt and roaches in her room and bathroom. In another room, a resident was observed with a fall mat between beds that had debris and footprints, a soiled glove on the floor, and a floor that was noticeably dirty and in need of mopping. In yet another room, the wall under the window was dirty and needed painting, and crusty material was present on the floor, wall, and baseboard behind the bed; the resident stated staff never cleaned the room and that she had to look out at the “nasty mess.” Support service areas were also not maintained in a clean, orderly condition. The laundry room contained washed clothing left in washers, dryers full of clothing waiting to be folded, and tables piled halfway to the ceiling with unfolded clothing. Shelves held many plastic bags of clothing identified by the laundry aide as personal belongings to be donated. The laundry room floors were grossly soiled, and a large bin of soiled laundry contained pillows with yellowish-brown substances mixed in with soiled bed linens. In the kitchen, floor tiles were missing at the entrance, and the removed tiles were placed on a pellet warmer next to the missing area. The Director of Maintenance stated the tiles had been removed a couple of months earlier and acknowledged that the missing tiles could be an area where staff could trip and fall. Throughout the survey, residents, family members, visitors, and staff consistently reported concerns about roaches, room size and layout, clutter, and cleanliness. Residents described roaches crawling on ceilings and walls, flying roaches present day and night, and worsening infestations since construction began. Staff interviews confirmed difficulty providing care and cleaning in cramped rooms with beds against walls and acknowledged environmental issues such as gaps at thresholds that allowed insect entry and leaking plumbing that contributed to standing water. Despite these observations and reports, during multiple debriefings and final interviews, the administrative team either made no comments, voiced no concerns, or did not provide additional information regarding the identified environmental and cleanliness deficiencies.
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