The December 26 night shift at Belpre Landing Nursing and Rehabilitation operated without any registered nurses or respiratory therapists from 6 p.m. to 6 a.m., leaving LPNs to manage complex ventilator equipment they weren't certified to operate independently.

Resident #2 required continuous mechanical ventilation through a tracheostomy tube, with detailed care protocols including ventilator checks every four hours, equipment changes on strict schedules, and monitoring for respiratory distress. The resident's care plan specified multiple daily interventions: changing the inner cannula every shift, cleansing the tracheostomy site, monitoring oxygen levels, and watching for signs of breathing problems including low oxygen, labored respiration, and changes in mental status.
Director of Nursing confirmed to inspectors that no RN or respiratory therapist worked that night shift. He defended the staffing decision, stating he felt the earlier presence of an RN during the day shift satisfied requirements. When asked directly whether LPNs could provide ventilator care without supervision, he acknowledged uncertainty about whether such care fell within an LPN's scope of practice.
The nursing director's justification centered on informal training. He told inspectors the LPNs had "received an education and watched ventilator care being performed," which he believed qualified them to work with ventilator patients without supervision. However, he admitted no certification or return demonstration had been completed to verify their competency.
Medical literature cited in the inspection report emphasizes the sophisticated nature of mechanical ventilators and the specialized training required to operate them safely. Inappropriate setting changes, failure to respond to alarms, unauthorized adjustments, and poor communication with medical teams all contribute to negative patient outcomes.
The resident's physician orders detailed an extensive care regimen. The ventilator required specific settings: assist control/volume control mode via tracheostomy, pressure control at 22, respiratory rate of 20, inspiration time of 1.2 seconds, positive end-expiratory pressure at 6, and oxygen concentration at 32 percent. Equipment changes followed rigid schedules — the ventilator circuit monthly, the heat and moisture exchanger daily, and the tracheostomy tube every 30 to 45 days.
Daily care included changing the inner cannula every shift, cleaning the tracheostomy site with sterile water, patting it dry, and applying a drain sponge. Nurses were instructed to monitor for multiple warning signs: difficulty breathing, low oxygen levels, use of accessory muscles, blue skin coloration, mental status changes, and rapid breathing.
The inspection report notes that respiratory therapists are best equipped to manage, adjust, and document ventilator care, and recommends limiting the number of healthcare professionals authorized to make ventilator adjustments. All ventilators have alarms that activate when ventilation changes occur, and staff must know how to respond appropriately.
Federal inspectors found this staffing pattern represented a failure to ensure adequate supervision of complex respiratory care. The violation occurred during a complaint investigation, suggesting someone reported concerns about the facility's ventilator care practices.
The facility's care plan for Resident #2 acknowledged the complexity of the case, setting goals to maintain oxygen levels at provider-specified targets and requiring respiratory therapist involvement for tracheostomy tube changes. Yet on the night in question, no qualified supervisor was present to oversee the intricate care this vulnerable patient required.
This case illustrates the gap between written care plans and actual staffing practices. While the facility documented comprehensive protocols for ventilator care, the absence of properly qualified staff during an entire 12-hour shift left a critically ill patient dependent on nurses operating outside their certified scope of practice.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Belpre Landing Nursing and Rehabilitation from 2026-01-30 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.