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Hi, my aunt recently started to reside in a skilled facility. She is pretty young, probably about 55, but in a lot of pain. Because she is in so much pain, she it is very hard for her to get to the shower to bathe, but the issue is she HATES people to touch her so can't have a bed bath. What they've come up with is that she cleans up in her room. She does her whole body with wash rags and towels (sort of giving herself a bed bath if you will). She is very clean, she just likes her privacy. She washes her hair either in the sink or in one if the basins designated for that.
The issue is, she has very fine her and it has always taken a long time to dry. Along with some other factors (large windows, high humidity, other residents heat on full blast) it takes her hair probably about 4-5 days to dry completely. And they want her to wash it every week.
Recently, the administrator and the don came to see her. I guess some aides had decided to tell them that she wasn't washing her hair and that it was oily. (I guess drying hair looks a lot like oily hair). Although my aunt repeatedly told them it was just wet, they didn't believe her. The DON told her that people have reported her "behaviors" to her. She said she was going to make her talk to psych whether she wants to or not. Also, unless she starts going to the shower or getting a bed bath and she was going to make her go to a behavioral hospital aka psych ward. Now, my aunt does not want this but there seems to be no way to change her mind.
My question is: What is the process of this? My aunt hates psychologists and will absolutely not talk to one. What will happen if she doesn't? Will they just seem get incompetent and ship get out? Can they do this? I know the DON is important but my aunt has all of her rights. She's sound of mind and is her own guardian and doesn't have POA. Her rights shouldn't just be negated because someone chooses to believe something that isn't true. It isn't right. If anyone has any insight into how these psychology issues work please let me know. It feels like the DON is out to get my aunt and will do anything possible to send her to a psych ward. I'm pretty scared for her and would like any help possible.

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Why is she in SNF at such a young age?

Does she currently take anything for the pain? If not, why not? If so, maybe it is not enough, or she needs more on the day of her washing.

Why isn't she using a hair dryer??

I have a lot of fine, shoulder length hair. In no way does it take *days* for it to air dry. If I'm not sweating or doing anything dirty I wash it every 4 days and it's pretty greasy by then.

If your Aunt is rejecting all reasonable solutions then maybe she does need to be in a psych ward.
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Reply to Geaton777
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The hair drying time makes no sense. No way it takes multiple days. Your aunt needs someone to advocate for her, knowing that advocating isn’t always blindly believing everything she says, more like looking after her best interests whatever that might be. In this case there should be what’s called a care meeting, we had them regularly when my mom lived in a nursing home, the family can ask for one anytime. Go into it listening to what’s been documented on her behaviors, listen to both sides, and try to find a resolution that works for all. Your aunt also seriously needs a POA, we all do, someone to speak for us in the event we cannot do so for ourselves. That’s not taking over, it’s wise, again, for us all. There are health risks to not being properly clean, see if this has been noticed. Being in professional care most often means accepting the help of others, including the staff, with tasks most of us would prefer to handle privately. I wish you well in finding the best plan forward
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Reply to Daughterof1930
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All due respect - I do not believe that her hair takes more than a few hours to dry. I have fine hair and it dries on its own quickly and frequently becomes a frizzy mess if I don't get it out of the towel fast enough.

My daughter has a ton of thick hair - to the point where the bottom 4 inches at her nape she does an undercut on for most of the year so its not so heavy. It is very long, thick and it takes her using a hair dryer for nearly an HOUR to get it all dry. And her hair if air dried, may take overnight (somewhat damp still the next morning after a mid-evening shower) and by the 24 hour mark it is FULLY dry. (our hairdresser rarely dries my daughter's hair, usually just french braids it and she can take it out and wear it curly the next day while it completely dries)

I don't mean to be disrespectful of your aunt, but damp hair and oily hair look different. Fine hair gets limp and oily very fast. If I don't wash mine every other night, I typically have to use dry shampoo to get me through an extra day because it starts to get limp.

If all of this information you have is based on her words to you via the phone- you have to take it with a grain of salt. Frequently people with any level of dementia come up with confabulations. Perhaps she thinks she is bathing herself more often than she is?

As far as the psychiatric facility - I want to caution you - she wants to avoid this if she doesn't really need it and just isn't cooperative or meeting hygiene requests by taking better care of her hygiene. No one wants to go to a psychiatric ward. If they are suggesting that - its not likely because she is not hygiene compliant, but perhaps there are additional things they are seeing that you are not aware of.

Why doesn't she have an assigned POA? That person is only invoked if she is no longer competent. And they are to act on her behalf based on how she would act for herself.

If she is misrepresenting how often she is bathing - and I use that term loosely because if they are not overseeing, you don't really know what she's doing - she can get infections - really bad infections if she has any open wounds or sores. And honestly if she already has problems with being touched, she really doesn't want to have to go through infection and wound care.
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Reply to BlueEyedGirl94
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Bulldog54321 Oct 20, 2025
It’s the same with my daughter’s very long and VERY thick hair. It’s fully dry a few hours after she washes it and lets it air dry.
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Sounds like you're missing half the story here. If not and what you claim is true, the finer the hair, the FASTER it dries. Your aunt needs a psych workup, based on what you write. It doesn't sound like anyone is out "to get" your aunt but to get her CLEAN and smelling fresh to live with others in communal care, and to avoid bacterial infections or skin breakdowns. A patients "rights" only go SO far and she must be compliant with the basic facility rules in order to avoid hassles. That's life, isn't it?

When was the last time you saw her, in person?

Best of luck to her.
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Reply to lealonnie1
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No way does hair take days to dry. A few hours at most, and that's if hair is thick and long. So either she's lying or delusional. This should make you wonder what other delusions or manipulations she is engaged in. Is she really washing herself down?

What is she in the SNF for at such a young age for, and why is she in so much pain? Pain is much more controllable now than it used to be.

I'm glad you care about your aunt, but how often do you see her and how much time do you spend with her? It sounds like she does indeed have some psychological issues and some treatment to help her get them under control would make her life better.
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Reply to MG8522
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Why does it take days to dry hair? Are you receiving this information by phone and conversations with your aunt? Or are you actually visiting and can 100% confirm her bathing and washing of hair?
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Reply to AMZebbC
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We would be guessing, wouldn't we, if we had to answer this? How could we know what their policy is, what the Aunt's real condition is, and what psychologist or psychiatrist she will be seeing. We also don't know your Aunt and can't begin to imagine whether or not there are other concerning behaviors. Some of this, on the face of it, isn't making sense, because there is no such thing as hair that takes that many days to dry, unless it is tightly braided or in "dreadlocks".

I think this is something that you can only address with the administration. I would cooperate with their request and take this a step at a time hoping there is some satisfactory resolution. I am so sorry for all the woes encountered here and wish you luck.
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Reply to AlvaDeer
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Is your Aunt paying privately? Because Medicaid usually does not pay for someone under 65. Your Aunt really doesn't seem to fit the criteria for Skilled Nursing. Pain managenent can be done with a specialist and staying in your own home.

Is your Aunt special needs? And the hair, I have fine hair and its almost dry by the time my stylist is done cutting my hair.

Seems to be your Aunt needs a POA or she puts someone on her Hipaa forms who can talk to the staff.

A DON is in charge of the RNs, LPNs, and CNAs. She can recommend that Aunt be sent to a Psychiatrict facility but the facility Doctor would have to write up the order.
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Reply to JoAnn29
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There is Zero chance her hair is still wet 4-5 days later— it’s simply not possible.

It simply means to me that a psych hospital is probably in your aunt’s best interest and I think you should not run interference with what is about to happen here.
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Reply to Bulldog54321
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I wanted to revisit this particular statement for a second

"The issue is, she has very fine her and it has always taken a long time to dry. Along with some other factors (large windows, high humidity, other residents heat on full blast) it takes her hair probably about 4-5 days to dry completely."

I live in the South...in a very high humidity state. Our humidity AVERAGES between 75-80%. And even currently it is more than 40% on a relatively cool day. We also don't deal with SUPER cold weather well lol. So we tend to run our heaters a lot during the fall and whatever "winter" we actually have.

Just recently I took my fine hair to the beach a few weeks ago. So amp up the humidity. Large oceanfront balcony doors opening and closing. I showered at night (around 7pm) and if my hair was damp when I went to sleep (which it rarely was) it was completely dry (and frizzy) when I got up the next day.

Is your aunt maybe spraying something on her hair to make it smell better, potentially using dry shampoo, or even wetting it down to make it defrizz or make it easier to manage flyaways? My thick-haired daughter can run a brush through her hair and it goes back to "normal". I frequently have to use styling tools or products to get my hair manageable.

Especially the more extreme the environment is (humid or dry). Think touching a Van de Graff generator and hair standing straight out.

Copilot advises that thin, fine hair can take 1-3 HOURS to air dry.

Time dilation is a real thing. My FIL used to believe that he didn't see another living soul in his room for HOURS. We knew this wasn't true. And we could literally test it. He could look at the clock and see 12:00. And then look a few minutes later and it would say 12:05. He would say it had been 5 HOURS. Or he would say it was 5:02. Or 2:05 or even 1:20.

Is it possible that she is misremembering or even possibly exaggerating how long her hair takes to dry? And is there any way to even confirm that she is actually bathing herself? Is she wetting her hair to make it look like she cleaned it?

There are a lot of variables that could be at play here. I just don't believe that her hair is still CLEAN and WET after DAYS. If she's not getting conditioner or shampoo out....it will look dirty. And wet or oily.
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