The patient, identified as Resident D, had an indwelling catheter that required output documentation every shift under doctor's orders dated May 3rd. Instead, staff skipped the monitoring entirely on multiple occasions throughout August and September.

Federal inspectors found the gaps during a September 26th complaint investigation. Medication administration records showed no urine output documentation on August 7th during the day shift. Five days later, staff again failed to record measurements on August 12th's day shift.
The pattern continued into September. Night shift workers missed documentation on September 8th, September 16th, and September 18th.
Staff Member 18 told inspectors during the survey period that physician orders must be followed. The facility's own policy manual reinforced this requirement, stating it was official policy to follow physician orders and provide essential care consistent with each resident's physical status.
Yet the documentation gaps persisted even as inspectors conducted their review between September 22nd and 26th.
Resident D's medical condition made the monitoring particularly critical. Neuromuscular dysfunction of the bladder can cause serious complications when catheter output isn't properly tracked. The physician had specifically ordered every-shift monitoring to ensure the resident's safety and appropriate medical care.
The Regional Director of Operations provided inspectors with an undated copy of the facility's physician orders policy on September 26th at 10:39 a.m. The document outlined the facility's commitment to following doctor's instructions for essential resident care.
But the medication administration records told a different story. The missing documentation represented a clear violation of both the physician's explicit orders and the facility's own stated policies.
Waters of Georgetown operates at 1002 Sister Barbara Way in Georgetown, Indiana. The facility received a citation for failing to provide appropriate catheter care under federal nursing home regulations.
The inspection was triggered by a complaint and focused on catheter care practices for residents with indwelling devices. Inspectors reviewed records for three residents with catheters and found the documentation failures affected Resident D specifically.
Proper catheter monitoring serves multiple medical purposes. Output measurements help detect infections, blockages, and other complications that can become life-threatening without prompt intervention. For residents with neuromuscular bladder dysfunction, consistent monitoring becomes even more essential.
The physician's order requiring every-shift documentation reflected standard medical practice for catheter care. Day shift, evening shift, and night shift staff all had responsibility for recording the resident's urine output as part of routine care.
Instead, the August and September records showed a pattern of missed documentation spanning both day and night shifts. The gaps occurred across different nursing teams and time periods, suggesting systemic rather than isolated failures.
Federal regulations require nursing homes to follow physician orders and provide appropriate catheter care to prevent urinary tract infections and other complications. The documentation requirements aren't administrative busy work — they're medical safeguards designed to catch problems before they become emergencies.
Resident D's case highlighted how policy violations can directly impact individual patient care. The missing urine output records meant medical staff lacked critical information about the resident's condition during the affected time periods.
The facility's Regional Director of Operations acknowledged the physician orders policy when providing documentation to inspectors. The policy language was clear about following doctor's instructions for essential resident care.
Yet the medication administration records revealed the gap between written policy and actual practice. Staff had the orders, understood the requirements, and still failed to complete the monitoring on multiple occasions.
The violation affected few residents but represented minimal harm or potential for actual harm under federal inspection standards. However, the pattern of missed documentation raised questions about oversight and compliance with medical orders.
Waters of Georgetown now faces federal scrutiny over its catheter care practices and adherence to physician orders. The facility must submit a plan of correction addressing how it will ensure consistent monitoring compliance going forward.
For Resident D, the documentation gaps meant weeks of incomplete medical records during a critical period of catheter care.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Waters of Georgetown, The from 2025-09-26 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.