First, I'm sorry if this is vulgar, but it seems that my mom's unit shaves the residents' pubic hair. I'm not bothered by this, I actually think it's cleaner, but no one ever mentioned that it happens and I'm wondering if this is a common practice at other nursing homes.
In case it matters, my mom is in a long term dementia unit where most residents wear diapers. Thanks.
That said - I have trimmed my sons...umm - area- in the past. It was when he either was experiencing a bout of diarrhea or when he was in school still and staff were not good at getting him to the bathroom on time. Cleaning dried on, crusty poop is a miserable experience for everyone involved - and can be painful for the person if there's a lot of tugging on the hair.
So while I've never heard of a place dealing with older folks doing it - it does make some sense to me.
Not that I'd know personally. But this is what a friend told me.
Mom and I were watching TV one night here at home, and there was a commercial on for a new tv show, where a 40-something woman masquerades as a 20-something woman in order to get a particular job. She makes friends with her young co-workers, never letting on how old she is. In one of the commercials, the 40-something is with two of the 20-something co-workers at the gym in the locker room, and they're all getting undressed to shower or change. The two younger women drop their undies, and the older one does the same - to gasps of horror from the younger ones.
20-Something #1: "OMG! Don't you WAX?!?!"
20-Something #2: "OMG - it looks like my MOTHER'S....."
Mom looks at me and says, "I think mine's gone BALD!"
I had never, ever heard Mom make reference to body parts like that....I just about fell off my chair laughing.
Anyway, not trying to stray from the topic, just trying to bring a smile to your face. I hope you get to the bottom of the shaving. Do come back and let us know what you find out.
Obviously if this isnt your case please disregard this answer.
I would strongly question why it is done.
It makes no sense to me. All procedures can be done properly without shaving. (other than some surgical procedures but this would not be done in a facility)
The key is preventative maintenance. Check often and wash with soap and water and rinse thoroughly to prevent sore private parts.
The only times I have ever shaved private parts was back in the 1960's when it was hospital policy to shave the pubic hair of women in labor. I do not think that is common practice anymore.
And if some health care workers think that they cannot get a patient clean without shaving pubic hair, it shoud be clipped. Not shaved.
I'm SURE they used a disposable razor and were very careful. I had 5 C-sections and was shaved with the first 3--after that they'd determined that having hair wasn't the awful infection possibility previously thought.
The itching as is it grew back was almost as painful as the C-section incision!!!!
My 95-yr-old aunt has 'gone bald' also, but I am only 1/2 bald, and incontinent. Now to decide. hee,hee.
But yeah - the grow back was miserable. I felt like one of my little dogs - with the nearly uncontrollable desire to scoot myself along the living room rug!
Just my immediate thoughts.