The resident, identified as R1 in the September 26 inspection report, told investigators she wanted her daughter informed "of whatever was going on with her." She said she hoped to speak with her soon, calling her daughter "the love of my life."

But facility records showed no notification was ever made when R1 developed pneumonia in August and began antibiotic treatment.
On August 17, R1's physician ordered Azithromycin tablets for pneumonia treatment. The prescription called for two 250-milligram tablets by mouth once, followed by one tablet daily for four days. The resident was on oxygen at 2 liters via nasal cannula when inspectors visited her room.
The facility's electronic medical records listed V9, R1's daughter, in multiple roles: resident representative, emergency contact number one, care conference person, and customer care representative. The system included V9's current address and phone number.
Director of Nursing V2 confirmed that R1's daughter should have been informed about the pneumonia diagnosis and antibiotic treatment. V2 said the daughter had updated her phone number before R1 developed pneumonia, and the electronic medical record contained the current contact information.
"Families need to be informed so they know what was going on with their loved ones," V2 told inspectors.
The facility's own policy on resident condition changes, dated September 20, requires staff to "place call to responsible party to notify them of the resident's change in condition." The policy specifically aims "to ensure that the resident's physician and responsible party is kept informed regarding the resident's change in condition."
A registered nurse identified as V10 confirmed that V9 was "the one to be called for any change in R1's condition including new orders of meds and antibiotics" and that such notifications should be documented in the resident's medical record.
No such documentation existed.
The breakdown represents a fundamental failure in communication protocols that nursing homes use to keep families informed about their loved ones' health status. Pneumonia is a serious condition for elderly residents that can progress rapidly without proper monitoring and treatment.
R1 remained alert and able to verbalize her needs when inspectors visited her room at 10:10 AM on the day of the inspection. She expressed hope about reconnecting with her daughter, unaware that the facility had failed to inform her daughter about the recent health crisis.
The violation affected one of three residents inspectors reviewed for family notification compliance in a sample of seven cases. Federal investigators classified the harm level as minimal but noted the potential for actual harm when families are kept uninformed about significant health changes.
The facility had all the necessary contact information and clear internal policies requiring notification. V2 acknowledged that the daughter's phone number had been updated in the system prior to the pneumonia episode, eliminating any excuse about outdated contact details.
The inspection report does not indicate whether the facility has since notified R1's daughter about her mother's pneumonia treatment or implemented additional safeguards to prevent similar communication failures.
For families of nursing home residents, the case highlights the importance of regularly checking in with facilities about loved ones' health status, rather than relying solely on nursing homes to provide updates as required by their own policies and federal regulations.
The daughter remains unaware that her mother, who calls her "the love of my life," fought pneumonia alone while facility staff failed to pick up the phone.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Alden Terrace of Mchenry Rehab from 2025-09-26 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.
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