Failure to Provide Timely Toileting and Incontinence Care, Compromising Resident Dignity
Summary
The deficiency involves a failure to honor a resident’s right to dignity and timely assistance with toileting and incontinence care. The resident was cognitively intact and had diagnoses including non-progressive congenital joint contractures and COPD, with a care plan indicating a self-care performance deficit and the need for one-person assistance for toileting and transfers. On the day of the incident, the resident had received medication to stimulate a bowel movement and, feeling the medication begin to work, activated her call light at approximately 12:15 PM to request help to the bathroom so she could avoid soiling herself in bed. A nurse aide who was not assigned to the resident (NA #1) responded to the call light within several minutes, was informed of the urgent toileting need, turned off the call light, and told the resident she would return, but did not provide assistance. NA #1 reported that she informed a nurse (Nurse #2) and another nurse aide (NA #2) at the nurses’ station that the resident needed help to the bathroom. Subsequently, NA #2 entered the room to deliver the resident’s lunch tray; by that time, the resident had already had a bowel movement and requested incontinence care. NA #2 turned off the call light and stated she would return, but instead prioritized passing trays and assisting other residents with eating, citing a long-standing rule that residents could not receive incontinence care or toileting assistance while meal trays were in the hallway. The resident reported repeatedly activating her call light and stated she waited over an hour, until approximately 1:22 PM, before a staff member from rehabilitation (the Director of Rehabilitation Services) answered the call light. The resident told this staff member she had been waiting and needed to be changed, and incontinence care was provided only after this was communicated to nursing staff. During this period, the resident remained soiled and delayed eating her lunch until after she received incontinence care. The resident expressed anger, frustration, and dislike of sitting in her feces, noting that at home she had been able to reach the bathroom independently and did not soil herself in an incontinence brief. Facility leadership later confirmed that there was no facility rule prohibiting incontinence care while meal trays were in the hallway and characterized the incident as a dignity issue.
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