Failure to Provide Timely Diabetic Toenail Care and Shaving Assistance
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide timely ADL assistance for diabetic toenail care and shaving for multiple dependent residents. One resident with type 2 diabetes, moderate cognitive impairment, and an ADL self-care deficit had an order allowing podiatry visits, but on observation his toenails were long, curling around and under the toes. The LPN acknowledged the nails needed trimming and stated she did not know why this had not been done, adding that a podiatrist no longer comes to the facility. Another resident with type 2 diabetes, severe cognitive impairment, and dependence for personal hygiene had thick toenails that needed trimming; the LPN stated she was not comfortable trimming them due to their thickness and that the resident needed a podiatry referral. A third resident with type 2 diabetes, intact cognition, and a care plan intervention to refer to podiatry/foot care and cut long nails also had long toenails on observation, reported toe pain, and stated the toenails needed trimming. The deficiency also includes failures related to shaving and personal hygiene for residents dependent on staff for these ADLs. One resident with Parkinson’s disease, dementia, and dependence for personal hygiene was observed with facial hair and stated staff had not shaved him and that he did not like having facial hair. His roommate/family member reported that only one staff member at the facility shaves residents, so this resident has to wait until she has time. Another resident with arthritis, glaucoma, moderately impaired cognition, and dependence for personal hygiene was repeatedly observed with facial hair and later with facial hair and dirty-appearing hair. This resident reported that staff did not shave him with his last shower, that he did not receive a scheduled shower, hair wash, or shave, and that he had not refused any of these services, stating CNAs were always in a hurry and acted like they did not have time. Interviews with staff and review of facility policy further describe the circumstances leading to the deficiency. The LPN stated nurses are supposed to trim toenails for diabetic residents and that CNAs should notify nurses when trimming is needed, but she was unsure whether this should occur on shower days or skin check days. The ADON stated nurses oversee toenail trimming for diabetic residents but reported that it always ends up being done by her and that she has not had time due to short staffing. The Administrator stated toenail care for diabetic residents should be done when nails need trimming, that there is no schedule or designated nurse responsible, and that the facility no longer has an on-site podiatrist, instead referring residents out. The ADON stated residents are supposed to be shaved on shower days and as needed, while the Regional Director of Clinical Services reported there is no policy regarding shaving of residents’ faces. The facility’s written policy on fingernail/toenail care states that RNs are to trim toenails of residents with diabetes mellitus.
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