Dignity Violations During Mealtime Assistance
Summary
The facility failed to ensure residents were treated in a manner that enhanced dignity and respect during meals when staff placed white bath towels from the neck to the waist on residents without first obtaining consent. This occurred during lunch in the dining area, where 7 of 9 observed residents were covered with towels to protect their clothing. The facility’s RN stated the towels were used for residents who needed assistance with meals to prevent food from spilling on their clothes. The DON stated that placing a towel in front of residents during mealtimes without the resident’s consent can make residents feel embarrassed and that staff must ask for consent before doing so. The AD also stated that placing a towel on a resident without obtaining consent during mealtimes can make the resident uncomfortable and feel childlike. The residents involved had significant medical and functional needs. Resident 23 was admitted with dysphagia due to cerebral infarction, muscle weakness, and dementia, and the MDS showed severely impaired cognition with moderate assistance needed during meals. Resident 20 had legal blindness, muscle weakness, lack of coordination, and severely impaired cognition, with set up and clean up assistance needed during meals. Resident 36 had dysphagia due to cerebral infarction, hemiplegia, hemiparesis, and severely impaired cognition, with supervision and/or touching assistance needed during meals. Resident 26 had hemiplegia, hemiparesis, aphasia, dysphagia, protein-calorie malnutrition, and no capacity for medical decision making due to CVA. Additional residents observed or reviewed included Resident 39, who had dysphagia, muscle weakness, and moderately impaired cognition; Resident 14, who had aphasia, protein-calorie malnutrition, and severely impaired cognition; and Resident 43, who had dysphagia due to cerebral infarction, protein-calorie malnutrition, and severely impaired cognition. The facility policy titled Promoting/Maintaining Resident Dignity stated that care or procedures should be explained to residents before initiating the activity and that residents should be treated with respect and dignity while recognizing each resident’s individuality. The facility also referred to residents requiring meal assistance as "feeders." During a meal observation, Residents 10, 13, 20, 22, 23, 26, 29, and 36 were seated at a table designated for feeders, and the AD stated the listed room numbers were feeders because they needed assistance eating due to mobility issues, poor vision, or broken arms. The Interim AD stated that residents requiring assistance with meals were called feeders. The Interim DON stated that residents requiring assistance with meals should not be called feeders because it is a dignity issue and violates a resident’s inherent worth, self-respect, or right to be valued.
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