Failure to Maintain Resident Dignity During Grooming and Privacy Care
Summary
The facility failed to treat residents with respect and dignity for 2 of 8 residents reviewed for dignity. One resident, a 69-year-old female with diagnoses including morbid obesity, schizoaffective disorder, unspecified psychosis, bipolar disorder with manic episode and psychotic features, major depressive disorder, Parkinson’s disease, generalized muscle weakness, anxiety disorder, delusional disorder, and personality disorder, had a BIMS score of 14 and was able to make decisions regarding daily activities. Her care plan addressed ADL and self-care deficits and included staff assistance with bathing, shaving, and personal hygiene tasks. During observation on 03/10/2026, she was noted to have long facial hair on her shin, and she stated she would have liked to be shaved but staff had not offered assistance. She also stated she did not ask because she felt she was bothering staff. A review of interviews showed multiple staff members stated CNAs and other staff assisting with ADLs were responsible for checking hygiene and offering shaving assistance if the resident desired it. Staff stated that not assisting a female resident with unwanted facial hair could leave her embarrassed, ashamed, ignored, or feeling that staff did not care about her wellbeing. The DON stated she did not see harm with the resident having long facial hair and said the resident had been refusing ADLs, showers, and medications, but the progress notes did not show refusals of ADLs for shaving her facial hair. The Administrator stated any staff member who had contact with the resident should have asked if she wanted assistance with shaving her facial hair. The facility also failed to maintain the dignity of another resident with bilateral leg amputations and dementia without behavioral disturbance. This resident had a BIMS of 07 and was documented as having inattention, disorganized thinking, altered level of consciousness, and a need for assistance with personal care. During observation and interview, he was seen without bottoms, with his genitalia visible during the interview, and later his anus and genitals were visible from the entrance of his room while the privacy curtain was open or not in use. Staff stated he had been resistant to care and had refused to wear bottoms or covers, and one LVN stated staff would not intervene if he chose to remain bottomless in his room. The DON stated the behavior needed to be care planned and documented, and the Administrator stated it was not acceptable for residents to be exposed because it was a dignity issue.
Penalty
Resources
Below are regulatory guidelines relevant to this citation:
Trusted data from CMS and state health departments
Every citation, penalty and Plan of Correction is sourced from public CMS records (latest release June 24, 2026) and official state health department websites — never guesswork.
Trusted by long-term care providers and associations.



