Failure to Maintain Resident Dignity During Staff Interactions and Dining
Summary
The facility failed to ensure residents were treated with dignity during staff interactions and during dining for two residents. One resident was repeatedly and loudly yelling in the hallway while an LPN told the resident, "I'm going to assist you, but you're still yelling in the hallway for no reason." Staff did not attempt to determine why the resident was yelling or provide a targeted intervention at that time. Later, the same resident was repeatedly calling out for help for several minutes while the Administrator found that the resident had been incontinent and was wet, yet two nurse aides at the nurses' station did not approach or address the resident's calls for help. The resident stated staff did not treat him with respect and dignity, that they did not follow his instructions, and that he had been yelling because he needed help getting to his urinal and then needed help getting changed after urinating in his pants. The resident's record showed diagnoses including dementia, a quarterly MDS indicating he was cognitively intact, dependent on staff for personal hygiene, and frequently incontinent of bladder. The care plan identified behaviors including physical and verbal aggression and urinating on the floor, with interventions to assess and anticipate needs such as toileting, redirect with non-pharmacological interventions, and provide a urinal with routine checks for incontinence and clothing changes after episodes. The SSD stated that a negative staff approach could worsen the resident's response and that the nurse's manner was not likely to help him calm down or de-escalate the situation. The SSD also stated the staff should have used the interventions in the care plan and could have involved the DON or SSD if needed. During a dining observation, lunch trays were passed in random order so some residents waited while tablemates ate, and at one table two residents were served while two others waited until their tablemates had already eaten and left. Another resident was seated in a Broda chair, slid down and leaned to one side with her head nearly resting on the armrest when her lunch plate was placed in front of her. Two unidentified staff members pulled her away from the table and repositioned her using the hoyer pad under her, then the ADON and a nursing aide removed her from the dining room and left her lunch plate at the table. When she was returned to the dining room, her plate remained there, she refused bites when staff attempted to feed her, no one offered to warm the meal or provide an alternative, and an aide stood and leaned over her while talking to another aide without meaningful engagement before leaving her to gather meal tickets. The resident had cerebral palsy and a quarterly MDS indicated she was totally dependent on staff for all ADLs including nutrition and eating.
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