Stay Ahead of Compliance with Monthly Citation Updates


In your State Survey window and need a snapshot of your risks?

Survey Preparedness Report

One Time Fee
$79
  • Last 12 months of citation data in one tailored report
  • Pinpoint the tags driving penalties in facilities like yours
  • Jump to regulations and pathways used by surveyors
  • Access to your report within 2 hours of purchase
  • Easily share it with your team - no registration needed
Get Your Report Now →

Monthly citation updates straight to your inbox for ongoing preparation?

Monthly Citation Reports

$18.90 per month
  • Latest citation updates delivered monthly to your email
  • Citations organized by compliance areas
  • Shared automatically with your team, by area
  • Customizable for your state(s) of interest
  • Direct links to CMS documentation relevant parts
Learn more →

Save Hours of Work with AI-Powered Plan of Correction Writer


One-Time Fee

$29 per Plan of Correction
Volume discounts available – save up to 20%
  • Quickly search for approved POC from other facilities
  • Instant access
  • Intuitive interface
  • No recurring fees
  • Save hours of work
F0689
D

Resident Left Unattended in Whirlpool and Unsafe Smoking Supervision

Ferguson, Missouri Survey Completed on 02-20-2026

Penalty

No penalty information released
tooltip icon
The penalty, as released by CMS, applies to the entire inspection this citation is part of, covering all citations and f-tags issued, not just this specific f-tag. For the complete original report, please refer to the 'Details' section.

Summary

The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to keep a resident free from accident hazards and to provide adequate supervision during whirlpool bathing. A resident with moderate cognitive impairment, dementia, diabetes, hypertension, psoriasis, and a moderate fall risk was ordered to receive whirlpool baths three times weekly for chronic psoriasis. The resident’s care plan noted a history of resistance to bathing and the need for substantial assistance with showering and supervision for tub/shower transfers. During a scheduled whirlpool bath, the CNA responsible for the bath did not have all required supplies, including the resident’s special soap, before placing the resident into the filled whirlpool using a bathtub Hoyer lift. After lowering the resident into the water, the CNA left the spa room to obtain the special soap and asked the Environmental Services Director (ESD), who was not nursing staff, to watch the resident. The resident remained in the filled whirlpool while the CNA exited. As the CNA left and the ESD entered, the resident began to slide down in the water. The ESD reported seeing the resident slipping under the water and pulled the resident up by the arms; the resident stated that water went into his/her mouth and that he/she was scared and felt like he/she was going under. The resident reported to staff afterward that a CNA had tried to kill him/her and refused further whirlpool use, stating he/she was too scared to go back into the whirlpool. The resident also reported not being belted into the chair, while the CNA stated the strap was under the resident’s armpits and acknowledged that residents without good trunk control could slide down in the chair. The facility’s bathing policy required staff to stay with residents throughout the bath, not leave them unattended, use the call signal for assistance, and place supplies within reach, but the CNA left the resident alone in the filled whirlpool and did not use the call light to obtain help from nursing staff. The bathtub Hoyer lift in the spa had only an upper torso belt and lacked a lower lap belt, despite manufacturer instructions indicating the chair should have both a torso and lap belt. The DON was not aware that the chair should have had a lap belt and the lift chair was not assessed for safety concerns after the incident. Documentation showed brief monitoring for fearfulness after the slip, but there was no further documentation of the resident’s ongoing fear of the whirlpool or care plan interventions addressing that fear. A separate deficiency involved the facility’s failure to ensure safe smoking practices and proper disposal of cigarettes in the designated smoking area. Observations showed the smoking area littered with numerous cigarette butts on the ground, in the grass, and on walkways, as well as cigarette butts and trash in a plastic flowerpot/planter and in trash cans. Fireproof metal containers and smokeless ashtrays were present, but residents repeatedly placed lit or smoldering cigarettes into the flowerpot/planter and onto the ground. During supervised smoke breaks, staff passed out cigarettes and assisted with lighting but did not intervene or educate residents when cigarettes were placed in the planter or dropped on the ground, including when a cigarette bounced under a resident’s Broda chair and when cigarettes in the planter continued to smoke. Multiple residents with diagnoses such as lung disease, hemiplegia, schizoaffective disorder, and cognitive communication deficits were care planned as smokers who required supervision, smoking aprons, and instruction on facility smoking policies, including location, times, and safety concerns. Despite these care plan directives and the facility’s smoking protocol requiring use of fireproof ashtrays and prohibiting disposal of smoking materials in inappropriate areas, staff supervising smoke breaks did not redirect residents to use the proper self-closing ash receptacles and did not address the accumulation of cigarette butts and trash in non-approved containers and on the ground. The Administrator stated that staff monitoring smoke breaks were responsible for supervising residents, passing cigarettes, ensuring safety, and educating residents on proper disposal, and acknowledged that cigarettes should not be disposed of in the flowerpot/planter, trash cans, or on the ground.

Long-term care team reviewing survey readiness and plan of correction

We Help Long-Term Care Teams Stay Survey-Ready

We process and analyze inspection reports and plan of correction using AI to extract insights and trends so providers can improve care quality and stay ahead of compliance risks.

Discover our solutions:

An unhandled error has occurred. Reload 🗙