Failure to Provide Scheduled Showers and Maintain Personal Hygiene for Dependent Residents
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide necessary assistance with activities of daily living, specifically grooming and personal hygiene, to residents who were dependent on staff for showers and baths. For one resident, an older female with dementia, anxiety, hemiplegia following CVA, urinary tract infection, local skin infection, and a history of falls, the Quarterly MDS showed she was dependent for showers/baths, occasionally incontinent, and at risk for pressure ulcers. Her care plan directed staff to perform her baths on Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday between 6 a.m. and 6 p.m., with no refusals of care planned. During observation, her hair appeared oily and stuck to her scalp, and she had thick white buildup on her bottom teeth. She stated she wanted a bath/shower because her hair was oily, did not remember when her last bath/shower was, and reported that a CNA had told her that morning she would receive a bath/shower, but by lunchtime she did not think it would occur. Her shower sheets could not be located on record review. A second resident, an older male with chronic kidney disease, muscle spasms, afib, congestive heart failure, hypertension, acute respiratory failure with hypoxia, MRSA, and lumbar spinal stenosis, had a Quarterly MDS indicating normal cognition, bilateral lower extremity impairment, dependence for showers/baths, an indwelling catheter, bowel incontinence, and risk for pressure ulcers. His care plan also specified scheduled baths/showers on Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m., with no refusals of care planned. He reported that he only received a shower/bath once a week, wanted more frequent bathing, and had been told there was not enough staff. Record review showed his last documented shower sheet was dated several weeks earlier, and he later stated he had not yet had a shower/bath that week and believed his last one was on a specific date in the prior week. Staff interviews revealed systemic issues contributing to missed showers/baths. CNAs reported that hall closures for renovations led to resident relocations and changes in shower schedules, with certain halls assigned specific shower days and no showers given on night shift. Multiple CNAs stated there were only two CNAs on the 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. shift instead of the expected three to four, that they were responsible for showers/baths in addition to feeding, changing, and monitoring fall-risk residents, and that there was not enough time to complete all showers/baths. One CNA noted a designated shower CNA worked only on certain days, leaving regular CNAs to manage showers on other days, and acknowledged that some residents did not receive their scheduled baths/showers. The administrator and ADON stated the facility was supposed to have 3–4 CNAs so one could function as a shower technician and that nurses and the DON were to oversee showers via shower sheets, while an LVN reported that a resident frequently refused showers and that refusals were to be documented and addressed. However, staffing shortages, lack of night-shift participation in bathing, and missing or outdated shower documentation demonstrated that scheduled showers were not consistently provided as required by residents’ care plans and facility policies on showers and bed baths.
Penalty
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