Failure to Provide Timely Incontinence Care to Dependent Residents
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide timely and appropriate incontinence care to dependent residents on one nursing unit. During an incontinence tour, a surveyor and a CNA observed one resident in bed with two incontinence briefs in place, both saturated with urine. The CNA confirmed that the resident should not have had two briefs on and that both were saturated. The resident, who was cognitively intact with a BIMS score of 13, reported not having been changed since the previous night and denied requesting two briefs. The resident’s care plan documented urinary and bowel incontinence and required staff assistance for personal hygiene, including toileting upon awakening and as needed, monitoring for skin irritation, and providing skin care and moisture barrier after each incontinence episode. There was no documentation that the resident had requested two briefs. A second resident approached the surveyor and CNA in the hallway and requested a diaper change. The surveyor observed that this resident’s clothing was heavily soiled and disheveled. In the resident’s room, the CNA exposed the incontinence brief, which was down by the resident’s knees and heavily soiled with copious amounts of dried and wet feces, while the resident also had an indwelling urinary catheter in place. The resident stated that their brief and clothing had not been changed since Saturday. The CNA confirmed that the brief was heavily soiled and that it did not appear the resident had received care recently. This resident’s medical record showed diagnoses including bipolar disorder and neuromuscular dysfunction of the bladder, an intact cognition with a BIMS score of 14, frequent bowel incontinence, an indwelling urinary catheter, and a care plan intervention to assist with perineal care as needed. Interviews with facility staff further supported that required incontinence care was not being consistently provided. The LPN/Unit Manager for the involved nursing units stated that staff were expected to provide incontinence care every two hours on all shifts and that CNAs should notify a nurse if a resident refused care; she confirmed she had not been informed of any refusal by the second resident. The DON similarly confirmed that incontinence care should be provided every two hours on every shift and that the night-shift CNA should have informed the nurse if the resident had refused care. A facility policy on ADLs stated that residents unable to carry out ADLs independently are to receive services necessary to maintain grooming and personal hygiene, and that if residents with cognitive impairment resist care, staff should attempt different approaches rather than assuming refusal. No additional information was provided by the administrator to refute or explain the observed lack of timely incontinence care.
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