Failure to Provide Planned Oral Care and Toileting Assistance for Dependent Residents
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide necessary assistance with activities of daily living (ADLs), specifically oral hygiene and toileting, as required by residents’ care plans and facility policy. Facility policy stated that residents needing ADL assistance would receive adequate toileting every two to four hours and staff would assist with oral hygiene, with refusals reported to a supervisor. Resident #1, with dementia, anxiety, and Parkinson’s disease, had a care plan and care instructions requiring substantial/maximum assistance with personal hygiene and oral care, meaning staff were to apply toothpaste and brush the resident’s teeth. The Minimum Data Set (MDS) documented moderately impaired cognition, substantial/maximum assistance needed for hygiene and toileting, partial/moderate assistance for oral care, and no rejection of care. Resident #1 was observed on two separate dates with foul breath. Documentation showed that a CNA recorded oral care as completed during the overnight shift, but that CNA later stated they did not perform oral care for the resident and had documented anticipated care at the start of the shift rather than after completion. Another CNA assigned to the resident on day shift stated they did not brush the resident’s teeth because they believed night shift had already done so, and confirmed the resident had never refused care. The resident reported that staff did not brush their teeth and that they liked having their teeth brushed. An LPN and the unit manager both described that substantial/maximum assistance for oral care required staff to brush the resident’s teeth and that refusals should be documented, but the LPN incorrectly stated that the resident was independent with brushing their teeth, contrary to the care plan and MDS. Resident #2, with dementia and dependence for most ADLs, had a care plan documenting dependence on toileting hygiene, supervision or touching assistance for toilet transfers, and interventions including checking and changing briefs every three to four hours and as needed. Continuous observations on two separate days showed the resident seated in the dining area for over four hours each day without being repositioned, taken to the bathroom, or offered toileting, until staff eventually walked the resident to the bathroom or room. On one day, the resident’s brief was observed to be saturated when removed; on the other day, a large wet area was visible on the resident’s pants. Documentation indicated the resident was toileted during the day shift on both days at times inconsistent with the observed lack of toileting. The CNA caring for the resident stated residents were to be toileted or repositioned every two to three hours and that refusals should be reported to a nurse, but admitted that although the resident declined offers to be changed, these declinations were not reported and the resident was not re-approached. An LPN stated residents should be repositioned and toileted every two hours and that the assigned aide was responsible for doing so while the nurse ensured it occurred, and confirmed the resident should not have been sitting for over four hours.
Penalty
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