Failure to Provide ADL Assistance, Hygiene, and Meal Supervision
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide necessary assistance with activities of daily living (ADLs), including toileting and incontinence care, for a resident who was fully dependent on staff. One resident, cognitively intact but dependent for toileting hygiene, bathing, dressing, and bed mobility, and always incontinent of bowel and bladder, was observed lying in bed with a saturated brief and bed pad containing urine and liquid stool. The resident’s care plan required staff to change disposable briefs as needed, clean the peri-area with each incontinent episode, and check the resident as needed. A CNA reported the resident was last changed around 9:30 A.M., and the resident stated that night shift usually changed them before 6:00 A.M. and they were not changed again until around noon, despite being on a water pill and having recent diarrhea. Staff interviews, including with the DON and LPN, confirmed the expectation that incontinent residents be checked every two hours and kept clean, dry, and odor free. The deficiency also includes failure to provide hygiene assistance and appropriate grooming for another resident with impaired cognition, schizophrenia, reduced mobility, muscle weakness, and unsteady gait, who required partial to moderate assistance with personal hygiene, bathing, toileting, and dressing. The resident’s care plan indicated supervision with hygiene and toilet assistance with setup. A care plan meeting note documented that the resident needed a haircut, shave, nail trimming, and additional clothing, with staff to follow up. However, there was no documentation of refusals of hygiene assistance or of bathing assistance provided. Over multiple days of observation, the resident was repeatedly seen with messy hair, long yellow fingernails, and wearing the same stained white t‑shirt and jeans, and the resident stated that fingernails needed to be cut and clothes changed. CNAs reported that most residents did not have clothes available on the floor because the elevators were down and laundry had not brought clothes up, and that this resident was scheduled for showers on specific days. Additionally, the facility failed to provide required supervision during meals for another resident with severe cognitive impairment and multiple diagnoses including diabetes, muscle weakness, chronic kidney disease, dementia, depression, heart failure, and reduced mobility. The resident’s MDS and care plan required supervision while eating. Observations showed the resident in bed with a tray of untouched food on a bedside table placed out of reach, and on another occasion attempting unsuccessfully to reach a drink on a bedside table positioned out of reach, with the privacy curtain pulled and the room door closed. Later, the resident was observed with a plate of breakfast on the lap while drinks remained out of reach on the bedside table, again with the curtain pulled and door closed. A CNA stated the resident sometimes needed encouragement to come to the dining room and preferred to eat in the room, and that staff were expected to supervise the resident during meals. The Administrator and DON stated staff should supervise the resident during meals when indicated on the care plan and ensure bedside tables, food, and drinks were within residents’ reach.
Penalty
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