Failure to Honor Resident Shower Preferences and Provide Consistent Bathing Opportunities
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to honor residents’ reasonable shower preferences and to support resident choice and self-determination regarding bathing. The facility had no policy on showers and multiple residents reported inconsistent or significantly delayed showers despite care plans and MDS assessments indicating that bathing choices were very important to them. Documentation in shower sheets and progress notes frequently showed long gaps between showers without any recorded refusals, while staff interviews confirmed that showers were not consistently provided, often due to staffing issues and unclear processes for scheduling and documentation. One cognitively intact resident with hemiplegia, heart disease, COPD, diabetes, depression, incontinence, and significant ADL deficits was documented as receiving showers at intervals of 5–7 days in February, then going 14 days between showers in March, with a subsequent 9‑day gap and no refusals documented. This resident stated that the last few scheduled showers were missed due to short staffing, believed they smelled, felt others would not want to be around them, and expressed a desire for two showers per week. Another cognitively intact resident with lumbar spondylosis with myelopathy, osteoarthritis, osteoporosis, muscle wasting, and mobility limitations had documented shower intervals of 11 days in February and 18 days in March, with no additional showers or refusals recorded. This resident reported sometimes going two weeks or longer without a shower, described inconsistent shower provision related to changing staff, recounted an instance where a staff member said they did not want to get wet so the resident had to shower without assistance, and reported feeling dirty, embarrassed, itchy, and having oily, greasy hair. A third cognitively intact resident with hemiplegia/hemiparesis after stroke, COPD, depression, bowel incontinence, and total dependence on staff for most ADLs had documented showers on two dates in early February, then no further showers until early March, resulting in a 25‑day gap without any documented refusals, followed by 7‑ and 14‑day gaps between subsequent showers. The resident stated they were supposed to receive two showers per week but were lucky to get one every two weeks, reported that staff had promised a shower on a specific day that did not occur, denied refusing showers, and said they felt neglected when showers were not provided as expected. A fourth resident with dementia, osteoarthritis, spinal stenosis, incontinence, and ADL deficits had showers documented twice in February, then not again until mid‑March, creating a 26‑day gap with no refusals documented. This resident reported usually getting only one shower per week and only if enough staff were available, recalled previously receiving two showers per week, and expressed concern about smelling bad and using extra deodorant when showers were missed. Staff interviews further described systemic issues with shower provision and documentation. Multiple CNAs and CMTs stated that residents were supposed to be offered showers twice weekly, but acknowledged problems with residents actually receiving showers, citing short staffing, unclear division of responsibility among aides, and confusion about whether showers were documented on paper sheets or in the electronic medical record. One CNA reported hearing complaints from various residents that they had gone two weeks without a shower and believed residents were not getting showers consistently. The DON acknowledged that showers had been a problem in the past, described a room‑based shower schedule intended to provide two shower days per week, and stated that they should be reviewing shower sheets but had not done so. The administrator and DON both indicated that if the electronic record showed “not applicable,” the resident did not receive a shower, and staff confirmed that if there was no documentation, no shower had occurred. These actions and inactions resulted in multiple residents not receiving showers in accordance with their expressed preferences and the facility’s stated expectation of two showers per week.
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