Failure to Provide and Document Required ADL Care for Multiple Dependent Residents
Summary
Facility staff failed to provide required ADL care, including bathing, transfers, and grooming, to multiple dependent residents as documented in clinical records, observations, and interviews. One resident who was severely cognitively impaired and required partial/moderate assistance for showering was care planned to receive assistance with bathing and to choose between a shower or bed bath. ADL documentation over two separate months showed this resident received only one shower in one month and five showers in the following month, despite facility staff stating that showers are scheduled twice weekly and refusals are to be documented and reported. Census records showed the resident was out of the facility on only one day during this period, and the facility’s ADL policy required necessary care and services to maintain grooming and personal hygiene. Another resident, cognitively intact and dependent on staff for transfers using a total mechanical lift, reported not getting out of bed every day and stated staff only offered to get them up when enough staff were available. Observations over multiple days showed this resident in bed, and ADL documentation over three months reflected very limited transfers out of bed, with many days coded as not applicable or not attempted due to medical condition or safety concerns. Staff interviews indicated that not applicable should only be used when a resident is not in the building or is not allowed to get out of bed, and that all residents should be offered to get out of bed daily with refusals documented and reported to the physician and responsible party. A third resident, cognitively intact and requiring maximal assistance for mobility, transfers, bathing, dressing, and hygiene per MDS and care plan, had numerous dates across all three shifts with missing ADL transfer documentation. A CNA confirmed that transfers are documented in the electronic record and that if there is no documentation, it means the care did not occur. Another resident, dependent on staff for transfers, mobility, and requiring maximum assistance with hygiene and bathing, was observed with a large amount of facial hair and reported waiting for a family member to bring an electric shaver due to keloids and an inability to use facility razors. Therapy notes documented the resident’s repeated statements about waiting for a shaver, her distress about her appearance, and her refusal to participate in certain therapy activities because of her unshaven face, while a CNA described her as totally dependent and stated she believed the resident was waiting for someone to come and shave her and that the resident refused a lot. A fifth resident, severely cognitively impaired and completely dependent on staff for transfers from bed to wheelchair, was observed lying in bed multiple times over two survey days and was never seen out of bed during surveyor presence. The resident’s representative expressed concerns about whether staff were assisting the resident out of bed. The CNA assigned to the resident on one of those days stated the resident was completely dependent for all ADLs and admitted she did not transfer the resident out of bed because she arrived late to the unit as a float CNA, had other residents to care for, and believed, based on what she said a therapy staff member told her, that the resident did not need to get up that day. The therapy assistant later stated she had not instructed any CNA that the resident did not need to get out of bed and explained that it was beneficial for the resident to be up in the wheelchair as much as tolerated each day and that he had previously been up much of the time each day before his most recent readmission. Across these five residents, the survey findings showed failures to provide scheduled showers, to consistently offer and perform transfers out of bed, to document transfers as required, and to assist with grooming needs such as shaving, despite care plan directives, MDS assessments indicating dependence for ADLs, and facility policy requiring provision of necessary ADL care to maintain grooming and personal hygiene. Staff interviews repeatedly confirmed that care should be offered and documented, that refusals should be recorded and reported, and that lack of documentation indicates care was not provided, yet the records and observations did not support that these ADL services were consistently delivered.
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