Failure to Provide Nail Care and Personal Hygiene Assistance to Dependent Residents
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide adequate nail care and personal hygiene assistance to dependent residents, despite care plans and policies requiring such care. One resident with cirrhosis of the liver and type 2 diabetes, cognitively intact and requiring maximal assistance with personal hygiene, had a care plan intervention to keep fingernails short and avoid excessive moisture. Observation showed this resident’s fingernails were long, jagged, and had an unknown brown substance underneath. The resident stated he wanted his nails cut and cleaned but needed staff assistance, and a CNA confirmed the nails needed cutting and cleaning. Another resident with cerebral infarction, right-sided hemiplegia/hemiparesis, and chronic kidney disease, cognitively intact and dependent on staff for personal hygiene, also had a care plan indicating a self-care deficit and need for maximal assistance. Observation revealed long, jagged fingernails with an unknown brown substance, and the resident reported wanting his nails cut and cleaned but requiring staff help; a CNA verified the need for nail care. A third resident with traumatic brain injury and chronic kidney disease, with severe cognitive impairment and requiring moderate assistance with personal hygiene, was observed with similarly long, jagged fingernails and an unknown brown substance under the nails; an LPN confirmed the nails needed to be cut and cleaned. A fourth resident with cerebrovascular accident, peripheral vascular disease, and bilateral below-knee amputations, with moderate cognitive impairment and dependent for personal hygiene, had a care plan intervention to check nail length and trim and clean on bath day and as necessary. This resident was also observed with long, jagged fingernails and an unknown brown substance, stated he wanted his nails cut and cleaned but needed staff assistance, and a CNA confirmed the need for nail care. A fifth resident with hemiplegia/hemiparesis, cerebral infarction, and diabetes mellitus, cognitively intact and requiring staff assistance with bathing, dressing, and personal hygiene, reported not having had a shower and remaining in bed since breakfast, despite asking a CNA several times to get up and get dressed by a specific time to access her resident account. Observation showed the DON removing pieces of egg from the resident’s hospital gown and confirmed the resident was still in bed at lunchtime wearing a gown with food remnants from breakfast. The resident later confirmed she was not gotten out of bed and dressed until after the requested time, and the CNA acknowledged it was after that time before she had a chance to clean and dress the resident. On the following day, observations in the morning and afternoon again found the resident lying in bed wearing a hospital gown; the resident stated she had asked another CNA several times for help to clean up and get dressed and that her incontinence brief had not been changed since before breakfast. That CNA confirmed she had not assisted the resident with personal care since before breakfast and acknowledged she was expected to change incontinence briefs every two hours, but more than five hours had passed. An LPN confirmed she had directed the CNA to assist the resident to get up and dressed after breakfast, but the aide failed to do so. The facility’s policy on supporting activities of daily living stated that residents unable to carry out ADLs independently would receive services necessary to maintain grooming and personal hygiene.
Penalty
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