Failure to Provide Timely Incontinence Care and Scheduled Showers for Dependent Residents
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide timely incontinence care to a resident who was frequently incontinent and required substantial/maximal assistance with toileting hygiene. The resident was cognitively intact, had reduced mobility, and her care plan documented an ADL performance deficit, bladder incontinence, and the need for maximum assistance by one to two staff for toileting, with interventions to change disposable briefs frequently, clean the perineal area with each incontinence episode, and check frequently for incontinence. On the day of the survey observation, the resident reported she became incontinent of urine and stool at 11:45 AM, activated her call light, and requested to be changed at that time. She stated that a nurse aide told her she needed another staff member to help and that staff likely needed to serve lunch trays first, and she remained soiled while waiting. During continuous observation from 1:24 PM to 2:00 PM, there was a faint odor of urine and feces in the resident’s room, and her call light was not on at the start of the observation. The resident reiterated that she had been waiting since 11:45 AM to be changed. The assigned nurse aide acknowledged that the resident had asked to be changed but could not recall whether it was before or after lunch and stated she planned to address the resident during incontinence rounds. The aide also stated the resident required two staff for incontinence care, that she was the only nurse aide on the hall, and that she felt overwhelmed. Other nurse aides and the nurse assigned to the resident reported that the aide had not asked them for assistance with this resident prior to the observed care. The DON stated that the resident often complained of waiting two hours to be changed, that it was not acceptable for residents to wait long, and that staff were instructed to assist residents within 15 to 20 minutes. At approximately 1:50 PM, more than two hours after the time the resident reported becoming incontinent, the nurse aide and a medication aide entered the room and provided incontinence care. Upon removal of the brief, there was dried feces stuck to the resident’s buttocks, the brief was heavily soiled with urine and feces, and the drawsheet underneath was visibly wet. The aides cleaned the perineal area and buttocks, removed the soiled brief and drawsheet, and applied a clean brief and drawsheet. The observation confirmed that the resident had remained in heavily soiled incontinence products and on a wet drawsheet for an extended period, contrary to the care plan interventions to change briefs frequently and clean the perineal area with each incontinence episode. The deficiency also includes the facility’s failure to provide scheduled showers to a newly admitted resident who preferred showers and required supervision or touch assistance for bathing. The resident was admitted with a non-pressure chronic ulcer on the left lower leg and was placed on the shower schedule for Saturday and Wednesday on dayshift. Despite this schedule, the resident reported that she had not received a shower since admission and was observed with very oily, unkempt hair several days later. She stated that on her scheduled shower day, a nurse aide asked if she wanted a shower between breakfast and lunch, she agreed, but the aide never returned to provide it. The nurse aide later stated that the conversation about a shower occurred in the evening while she was working as a medication aide and that she asked the evening-shift aide to shower the resident, but she did not provide the shower herself. The nurse assigned to the hall that day confirmed that the aide on dayshift would have been responsible for showers. On the next scheduled shower day, the resident again did not receive a shower. The resident reported that the assigned aide told her she would provide a shower but later stated she had to leave soon and would inform the next-shift aide. The day-shift aide confirmed that the resident requested pain medication before showering and that, after two checks, the resident still reported pain, and the aide told her there was not enough time left in the shift to complete the shower and that the next-shift aide could do it. By the following day, the resident reported she still had not received a shower, and the evening-shift aide had told her there was not enough time to provide one. The resident continued to be observed with oily hair until a later time when she finally received a shower and hair washing. The DON and Administrator both stated that the expectation was for residents to receive showers on their assigned shower days and times, and if staff were unable to provide a shower, it should be communicated to the next shift or completed the next day. Despite these expectations and the resident’s documented shower preferences and schedule, the resident did not receive showers as planned on multiple scheduled days.
Penalty
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