Failure to Provide and Document Basic ADL Care for Multiple Dependent Residents
Penalty
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide and document basic activities of daily living (ADL) care, including bathing, hair washing, shaving, and oral hygiene, for multiple dependent residents. One resident with COPD, dementia, colon cancer with colostomy, anxiety, and depression required substantial to maximal assistance with showering, personal care, toileting, dressing, and transfers per the MDS and care plan. This resident reported that staff only sometimes shaved her facial hair and confirmed she preferred to have her chin shaved, yet surveyors repeatedly observed long chin hairs over several days. Review of the care plan showed she needed physical assistance with personal hygiene and that staff often needed to shave whiskers on her chin. Task sheets and shower documentation revealed no recorded bath or hair wash in the last 30 days, and two shower sheets within that period documented that she was not shaved on either shower day, with no explanation for missed showers or refusals. Further interviews and record reviews showed systemic documentation and scheduling issues contributing to the lack of care. A CNA stated the resident was scheduled for showers twice weekly and that refusals were to be documented on shower sheets and escalated to the nurse, but the facility could not produce adequate shower documentation for the prior 30 days. The DON later explained that CNAs did not know how to enter PRN showers and that when the resident was moved from one bed to another months earlier, her shower task days were not updated, leading CNAs to mark “NA” and follow an outdated schedule. The DON acknowledged that the resident had been moved in June of the prior year and that staff had continued to rely on the old schedule, and also acknowledged that no one had noticed the resident was not receiving showers as ordered. Another resident on hospice services, who was dependent on staff for all ADLs, also did not receive showers or baths from facility CNAs during the review period. Hospice coordination notes showed that a hospice CNA provided showers or baths on several specific dates, but there was no documentation that facility CNAs provided any showers or baths or documented refusals during the last 30 days. The DON stated that hospice admission information and visit notes were sent to the business office and ward clerk and were expected to be scanned into the electronic record or placed in a hospice binder, but record review revealed no hospice documentation in the electronic medical record or paper chart. The hospice binder was instead sitting in someone’s email account, and the DON stated she expected facility CNAs to provide care regardless of hospice involvement. A third resident with hemiplegia, muscle disorder, cervical disc disorder, fistula, difficulty walking, and major depression was dependent for all ADLs and was observed with visible plaque buildup on her teeth and heavy facial hair on her chin and upper lip. She reported that she had asked staff to shave her facial hair but was told the same razor was used on multiple residents, leading her to refuse that method and have her husband bring in an electric razor, which remained unused on her overbed table for at least a day. A CNA confirmed that the resident had not had her facial hair shaved until that point and that she was scheduled for a bed bath that day. The care plan directed staff to shave her face as needed and to encourage her to allow shaving, and there was no care plan entry stating she did not want her facial hair shaved. Shower sheets listed her for showers/bed baths twice weekly, but documentation showed no showers or bed baths in the last 30 days, with only two dates marked as refusals and no evidence of re-approach or nurse notification. The DON stated the expectation was twice-weekly showers or bed baths and acknowledged that refusals were only documented on two dates, with no corresponding progress notes showing re-approach or nurse follow-up, aside from a single progress note where the resident refused shaving with no documented follow-up.
