Failure to Provide and Document Adequate Bathing and Eye Hygiene for Dependent Residents
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide and document adequate bathing and hygiene assistance for a resident who was dependent on staff for activities of daily living. One resident with multiple medical conditions, including COPD, diabetes, morbid obesity, heart failure, CKD, depression, and anxiety disorders, had care plans indicating a self-care deficit and dependence on staff for bathing and showering. The care plan interventions included assistance with grooming and hygiene, setting up bath items and clothing, providing transfer assistance, bathing or showering with attention to dry sensitive skin, providing sponge baths when full baths or showers could not be tolerated, and washing hair weekly per the resident’s preference. Facility shower sheets and EMR documentation showed that bathing was recorded on 16 of 26 scheduled opportunities over a three‑month period, with multiple scheduled bathing days lacking any documentation of showers, tub baths, bed baths, or refusals, and no progress notes indicating that the resident refused bathing. Interviews with the resident revealed concerns about receiving bathing and hygiene assistance. The ADON, DON, and Regional Clinical Director each verified the bathing documentation and acknowledged gaps, stating that the resident was reportedly given daily bed baths as part of routine ADL care but that staff were not consistently documenting these baths, instead only documenting on scheduled shower days. The facility’s “Giving a Bed bath” policy required staff to review the care plan for special needs and to document the date and time of the bed bath, the staff member performing it, assessment data obtained, the resident’s tolerance, any refusals, and the recorder’s signature and title in the ADL record and medical record. Despite this policy, there was no evidence in the record that daily bed baths or refusals were documented for the missed scheduled bathing days. A second deficiency involved the facility’s failure to ensure another resident’s eyes were kept free of debris despite physician orders and the resident’s dependence on staff for personal hygiene. This resident, who lived on a secured memory care unit and had diagnoses including muscle weakness, hypertension, and major depressive disorder, had orders for refresh eye ointment at bedtime for both eyes and for baby shampoo to be applied to both eyes every morning and at bedtime to clean the eyelids and eyes for dry eyes. Multiple observations over consecutive mornings showed the resident seated in common areas with both eyes matted or crusted with debris. Staff, including a CNA, RDO, and RN, confirmed the presence of matted eyes and that CNAs were responsible for cleaning the eyes with baby shampoo per orders. The facility’s bed bath policy also described proper eye washing technique, but the repeated observations of matted and crusted eyes indicated that the ordered eye care and hygiene were not being consistently performed. This deficiency represents non-compliance investigated under Complaint Numbers 2725826, 2721789 and 1282446 (OH00166150).
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