Infection Control Program Deficiencies in Hand Hygiene, Linen Cart Coverage, Water Temperature, and Glucometer Disinfection
Summary
The facility failed to maintain its infection prevention and control program in several observed situations. During a concurrent observation and interview, a CNA changed a resident’s adult brief and removed the resident’s gown and gloves without performing hand hygiene after glove removal. The resident had been admitted with diagnoses including a right femur fracture, DM, hypothyroidism, anxiety, hypertension, and a history of falling. The resident’s H&P stated the resident did not have the capacity to understand and make decisions, and the MDS indicated moderately impaired cognitive skills for daily decision making and need for staff assistance with oral care, toileting, personal hygiene, and shoes. In the laundry area, linen carts for residents’ personal clothing were observed covered with blue woven/permeable material rather than a loosely woven/permeable cover that would protect the linens inside the cart. Laundry personnel stated the carts for personal clothing had always been covered that way, and the Maintenance Supervisor and ADON stated the mesh or permeable covering allowed air and water to seep through and did not fully protect the clothing from environmental contamination. The facility’s laundry and linen policy stated clean linen should remain hygienically clean through measures designed to protect it from environmental contamination, such as covering clean linen carts. The facility’s water temperature log showed multiple room temperatures at 106 to 108 degrees F across January through March. During interview, the MS and IP stated the facility was following the CDC Legionella water management toolkit and that water temperature control was being used to prevent growth of water-borne bacteria. They stated the temperature range where Legionella grows best is 77 to 108 degrees F, and the DON stated that when water temperature falls within the range where bacteria grow best, there is a risk for bacteria going into the facility’s water system that could potentially cause illness among residents. During medication administration, an LVN removed a glucometer from the medication cart, disinfected it with an alcohol swab in one sweeping motion from front to back, used it for a resident with severe cognitive impairment, tracheostomy, and total dependence for ADLs, and then again wiped the glucometer in one sweeping motion after use. The resident was on enhanced barrier precautions, and the subacute unit residents were described as all having tracheostomies and being at risk for acquiring infection if shared resident care equipment was not disinfected properly. The SAC stated the glucometer should have been wiped all over, including the sides, front, back, and the area where the test strip was inserted. The facility’s policies stated hand hygiene is required immediately after glove removal, clean linen carts should be covered to protect against contamination, and reusable blood glucose meters must be cleaned and disinfected between resident uses according to manufacturer instructions and infection control standards.
Penalty
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