Resident #116 told federal inspectors in October that their preference is a shower, but staff have only provided bed baths. The resident explained that the shower room on their unit hasn't been in use and is instead being used to store wheelchairs.

The case emerged during a complaint investigation at the 1300 Windlass Drive facility. Medical records revealed a physician had ordered weekly showers on Wednesdays and Saturdays on the 7-3 shift, dating back to February 20, 2023.
Despite this clear medical directive, documentation from September 2025 showed the resident consistently received only bed baths throughout the entire month. The facility's own tracking system uses numerical codes to distinguish between shower (Type 1), tub bath (Type 2), and bed bath (Type 3). Resident #116's records contained no Type 1 entries.
The resident lives with Parkinson's Disease and requires assistance with activities of daily living. Their care plan, initiated on July 29, 2025, noted they are "dependent for bathing" but failed to include their shower preference.
When confronted with the findings, the Director of Nursing acknowledged the problem. During an October 7 interview, the DON stated that if a resident's preference is a shower over a bed bath, "the resident should receive a shower." The nursing director added that the resident's care plan should reflect this preference to ensure they actually receive showers.
The violation represents more than just a preference issue. Federal regulations require nursing homes to honor residents' rights to self-determination and support their choices about their care. By converting a shower room into wheelchair storage and ignoring both medical orders and resident preferences, Oakwood SNF denied this fundamental right.
Bed baths, while sometimes medically necessary, cannot fully replace the therapeutic and psychological benefits of a proper shower. For residents with limited mobility, shower time often represents one of the few opportunities for privacy, dignity, and a sense of normalcy in institutional care.
The timing raises additional concerns. The care plan addressing the resident's bathing needs wasn't created until July 2025, more than two years after the physician's shower order. Even then, staff failed to incorporate the resident's stated preference or follow the existing medical directive.
Documentation showed the facility had systems in place to track different types of bathing. The September 2025 survey report clearly categorized bathing methods and should have flagged the discrepancy between ordered care and delivered care. Yet month after month, staff documented only bed baths.
The Assistant Director of Nursing wasn't made aware of the concern until October 9, the final day of the inspection. This suggests the facility's quality assurance processes failed to catch a two-year pattern of ignoring medical orders and resident preferences.
Federal inspectors classified this as a violation causing minimal harm with the potential for actual harm. However, the psychological impact on Resident #116 appears significant. Going without a preferred type of basic hygiene care for over two years while watching their shower room used for storage likely affected their sense of dignity and autonomy.
The case highlights how seemingly minor policy violations can compound into serious quality-of-care issues. What began as a space allocation decision - using a shower room for wheelchair storage - evolved into a systematic denial of resident choice and medical care.
Oakwood SNF's failure extended beyond the physical act of bathing. The facility's care planning process, staff training, and supervisory oversight all broke down. Multiple staff members, from direct care aides to nursing leadership, participated in or overlooked the ongoing violation.
The resident's situation only came to light through a complaint investigation. Without external scrutiny, Resident #116 might have continued receiving unwanted bed baths indefinitely while their shower room remained a storage closet.
For a resident already dealing with the progression of Parkinson's Disease and the loss of independence that comes with institutional care, being denied something as basic as their preferred method of staying clean represents a fundamental failure of person-centered care.
Resident #116 continues to live at Oakwood SNF, still seeking the showers they were promised more than two years ago.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Oakwood Snf LLC from 2025-10-09 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.