Failure to Provide and Document Required ADL Bathing and Hygiene Assistance
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide and document assistance with activities of daily living (ADLs), particularly bathing and hygiene, for multiple residents who required staff support. Several residents had care plans and MDS assessments indicating needs for partial to total assistance with bathing, dressing, toileting, and personal hygiene, yet records and observations showed infrequent showers, missed scheduled baths, and inadequate documentation of refusals or encouragement efforts. For one resident with osteomyelitis, diabetes with foot ulcers, and impaired cognition, the care plan required staff assistance with ADLs and support for non‑compliant behaviors, but electronic records showed only two showers over a period of more than two months, and paper shower sheets documented multiple refusals without any notation of interventions to encourage or explain the need for care. This resident reported wanting showers but stated staff told him they did not have time to apply necessary wound‑protective devices, leading him to forego showers and instead wipe off. Another resident with Parkinson’s disease, dementia, and total dependence for ADLs had a documented preference for daytime showers three times weekly. In March, this resident was only bathed or showered on a few of the preferred days, and an observation found him in a wheelchair with disheveled, dirty‑appearing hair and soiled clothing, which a CNA confirmed. A resident with severe cognitive impairment and total dependence for ADLs had a care plan calling for assistance with bathing per preference and a documented preference for early morning showers three times weekly; however, March shower sheets showed only a few bed baths and multiple entries where it was unclear whether a bed bath or shower was provided. Another resident with moderate cognitive impairment and multiple medical conditions required partial to moderate assistance with showering and had a care plan goal to remain clean, dry, and odor free, yet he reported he did not always get to shower when he would like, could not safely shower in his room due to a slippery floor, and was observed disheveled with a dirty shirt. Additional residents with significant medical histories and documented ADL needs also did not receive showers or baths as planned. One cognitively intact resident who required partial to moderate assistance with bathing and dressing had electronic records showing only three showers over a one‑month period, and her spouse reported he was present all the time and provided all of her care, stating staff did not do enough to assist with her ADLs. Another resident requiring partial to moderate assistance with bathing and using a wheelchair had a care plan to remain clean, dry, and odor free and a preference for showers on specific days; records showed only one shower and two bed baths in March, and he reported it had been four weeks since he had been in the actual shower, stating staff only washed his groin area and that he did not feel clean. A newly admitted resident, cognitively intact and needing maximum assistance with bathing and moderate assistance with personal hygiene, was scheduled for showers three times weekly, but documentation showed multiple missed showers or bed baths, and she reported not always receiving showers as scheduled, stating she had only one shower in the prior week; she was observed with greasy, uncombed hair and body odor. Multiple CNAs and an RN reported that residents were not getting showers or baths per their preferences or care plans, cited insufficient staffing, and described expectations for a high number of showers per shift and instructions not to shower residents requiring mechanical lifts, despite available equipment. The facility’s ADL policy required provision of necessary services to maintain grooming and personal hygiene and adherence to care plan objectives, which was not met in these cases.
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