San Gabriel Conv Center: CNA Slept During Shifts - CA

Healthcare Facility:

ROSEMEAD, CA - A federal inspection at San Gabriel Conv Center revealed a certified nursing assistant worked seven shifts over four consecutive days while repeatedly falling asleep on duty and neglecting basic resident care.

San Gabriel Conv Center facility inspection

Excessive Work Hours Documented

Federal inspectors documented that CNA1 worked an extraordinary schedule between March 8-11, 2025. Time card records showed the aide worked double shifts on consecutive days, punching in for evening shifts around 2:40-3:01 PM and not leaving until after 7:00 AM the following morning. This pattern continued for four straight days, totaling seven shifts with minimal rest between work periods.

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The nursing assistant's schedule included working from 2:47 PM on March 8 through 7:01 AM on March 9, then returning at 2:46 PM the same day to work until 7:03 AM on March 10. The pattern continued with another double shift from 2:40 PM on March 10 through 7:02 AM on March 11, followed by a final shift starting at 3:01 PM on March 11.

Sleep Deprivation Leads to Neglect

Multiple staff members reported observing CNA1 sleeping during work hours while assigned residents experienced neglect. LVN1 filed a formal grievance documenting instances where the aide was found sleeping and residents were discovered in soiled briefs without proper repositioning.

The licensed vocational nurse stated during interviews that CNA1 "hasn't improved in any way, which is really dangerous to the residents."

Medical protocols require regular repositioning of residents to prevent pressure ulcers and skin breakdown. Allowing residents to remain in soiled briefs for extended periods can lead to urinary tract infections, skin irritation, and compromised dignity. These basic care standards become impossible to maintain when nursing staff are asleep during their shifts.

Performance Issues Previously Documented

A Performance Correction Notice dated March 3, 2025, documented ongoing problems with CNA1's work performance. The notice indicated a registered nurse supervisor reported on February 27 that residents assigned to CNA1 were "found completely soiled" and that the aide had to be awakened by charge nurses to provide care.

Additional violations included taking longer breaks than scheduled and being away from assigned units during work hours. Staff reported having to repeatedly wake the aide to ensure resident care was provided.

Staffing Shortage Contributes to Problem

The Director of Staff Development confirmed the facility experienced nursing assistant shortages during the night shifts when CNA1 worked the excessive hours. Rather than utilizing agency staff or implementing proper fatigue management protocols, the facility allowed the aide to work consecutive double shifts despite documented performance issues.

When asked about allowing staff with poor performance warnings to continue working with residents, the Director of Staff Development did not respond to surveyors' questions.

Fatigue Management Standards Ignored

Healthcare facilities are expected to implement fatigue management policies that prevent staff from working excessive hours that could compromise patient safety. Working seven shifts in four days represents a clear violation of safe staffing practices that put both residents and staff at risk.

The facility's own policy manual defines competent staff as having "knowledge, skills, abilities, behaviors, and other characteristics that an individual needs to perform work roles successfully." Allowing an aide to work while sleep-deprived directly contradicts these competency requirements.

Regulatory Response

Federal inspectors cited the facility under regulations requiring sufficient and competent nursing staff to provide appropriate care services. The violations carry a "minimal harm" classification but affected multiple residents who experienced substandard care.

The inspection revealed systemic problems with supervision and quality assurance when staff performance issues are documented but not properly addressed. Healthcare facilities must balance staffing needs with resident safety, ensuring that care quality is never compromised by fatigue or inadequate performance.

Industry Standards for Safe Staffing

Professional healthcare standards emphasize that patient safety depends on alert, well-rested nursing staff. Working excessive hours without adequate rest periods impairs judgment, reaction time, and attention to detail - all critical factors in providing safe resident care.

The incident highlights the importance of proper staffing models that prevent individual employees from working beyond safe limits while maintaining adequate coverage for resident care needs.

Full Inspection Report

The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for San Gabriel Conv Center from 2025-03-14 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.

Additional Resources