Failure to Provide Dignified Morning Care and Respect Resident’s Need for Assistance
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to treat a cognitively intact resident with respect and dignity during morning care. The resident had a history of CVA with hemiplegia/hemiparesis, limited range of motion on one side, cataracts, and required substantial to maximal assistance for toileting hygiene and dressing, and was dependent for transfers. Her care plan called for staff assistance with ADLs, including one staff member to assist with dressing/grooming, assistance with toileting per her routine, and two staff with an EZ stand for transfers. Despite these documented needs, a CNA entered the resident’s room early in the morning, told her it was time to get up, placed her clothes in the wheelchair, and left without providing the needed assistance. According to the resident’s account, the CNA did not return for approximately 20 minutes. During this time, the resident, who required significant assistance, attempted to move her bedside table, sit at the edge of the bed, reach her wheelchair, and get herself dressed and to the bathroom without help. When the CNA returned and saw the resident was not yet up and dressed, the CNA reportedly told the resident she had other people to take care of and did not assist, leaving again. The resident reported feeling mad, worthless, and like “nothing and a nobody” as she struggled to get to the bathroom and use the grab bar to transfer herself to the toilet. When the CNA came back and found the resident in the bathroom, the CNA questioned what the resident was doing there by herself and then assisted with putting on the brief and pants. The resident reported this interaction to multiple staff members and described the CNA’s behavior and comments as rude and upsetting, though she did not personally label it as abuse. Another CNA reported that the resident was visibly upset, crying, and hitting the top of the bed in frustration while recounting the incident, and characterized the concern as one of respect and dignity. The facility’s own Resident Rights–Dignity and Respect policy states that each resident has the right to considerate and respectful care and to be treated with dignity and respect, with reasonable accommodation of individual needs. Additionally, a trauma screening documented that the resident had a history of verbal and physical abuse by her husband for 11 years, but the care plan did not include a post-trauma focus or related interventions, despite this history and the resident’s emotional response to the incident.
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