Failure to Provide Needed ADL Assistance for Grooming and Bathing
Summary
The facility did not ensure that residents who were unable to perform activities of daily living received the necessary assistance to maintain good grooming and personal hygiene for three residents reviewed. The deficiency involved Resident #11, Resident #7, and Resident #78, all of whom had assessments and care plans showing they needed staff help with hygiene, bathing, and grooming tasks. Resident #11 had diagnoses including non-Alzheimer's dementia, schizophrenia, and depression. The resident's assessment documented moderately impaired cognition and the need for partial assistance with personal hygiene and substantial assistance with toileting hygiene and showering. During observations, Resident #11 was seen with long, unshaven facial hair and stated a preferred staff member usually shaved their face, but the resident could not recall when that had last occurred. A CNA stated they were responsible for grooming, including shaving, but had not been able to shave the resident on the last assigned date because they were busy with showers for other residents, and they could not remember when the resident was last shaved. The CNA also stated the facial hair was too long to shave with a razor and would need trimming first. An RN stated CNAs were responsible for grooming activities and had not received report that the resident refused care. Resident #7 had diagnoses including hypertension, hepatitis, and major depressive disorder. The resident's assessment documented slight cognitive impairment and dependence on staff for oral hygiene, toileting, and showering, and the care plans documented dependence on staff for hygiene, grooming, bathing tasks, and daily ADL needs. The resident stated they had not had a bath or shower for a very long time, only received bed baths, and wanted to wash their hair; the resident's hair appeared unwashed during observation. A CNA stated the resident had not received a shower since admission and that the resident refused every time a shower was offered. However, the CNA accountability record for January and February did not document any shower refusals, and the unit manager stated they could not recall any report that the resident was not getting showers and that refusals should have been documented. Resident #78 had diagnoses of dementia and hydrocephalus and was severely cognitively impaired, totally dependent on staff for transfers, bathing, shower transfers, and personal hygiene, with no rejection of care documented. The resident was observed in bed wearing a hospital gown with greasy, unkempt hair and a full scraggly beard. The designated representative stated the resident should be transferred out of bed daily, showered twice weekly, and clean shaven. A CNA stated the resident required total assistance of two staff for bathing, transfers, and personal hygiene, did not refuse care, and was scheduled for a shower but instead received a bed bath; the CNA stated they only slightly wet the resident's head and dried it with another towel because the water was cold and there was no shower stretcher on the unit. The nursing supervisor stated every floor had a shower stretcher available and that the resident should be transferred out of bed for showers, while the DON stated there were concerns with residents receiving assistance with ADLs and that CNAs were expected to document the assistance provided.
Penalty
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