Unsanitary Kitchen Conditions and Inadequate Hot Food Temperatures
Summary
The deficiency involves failure to maintain sanitary kitchen conditions and proper food handling practices, as well as failure to consistently maintain safe hot food temperatures. During an initial kitchen tour, surveyors observed that the only kitchen handwashing sink had no paper towels available. The kitchen floor contained buildup of dry brown substances, dark food particles, sticky liquids, and residue from a pasta pot leak, with compacted dark brown particles along the perimeter behind a large pot. Similar dark brown substances were seen throughout kitchen preparation areas and on the walls. Personal employee food and beverages were stored on a serving tray in the walk-in cooler where resident food was stored, despite the traveling chef manager stating that employee items should not be in that area. Surveyors also identified improper use and handling of cleaning and sanitizing solutions. A red bucket under the cook’s preparation table contained a dirty-looking liquid and a dish towel; when asked to test the solution, the dietary cook immediately removed the bucket and discarded the contents in the three-compartment sink, ignoring the request. The traveling chef manager later stated that the discarded solution was dishwashing solution used to wipe food preparation areas, contrary to the dietary manager’s explanation that green buckets are for soap/detergent and red buckets are for sanitizing solution. The facility’s policy stated that cleaning involves removing food and debris from equipment and work surfaces, that floors and walls should be cleaned and then sanitized, and that sanitizing solution should be clean. On a subsequent observation, greasy, sticky brown substances were noted on walls near the stove and mixing area, with fruit flies flying within 12 inches of the sticky walls. The regional dietary director acknowledged that the kitchen and floors should be deep cleaned and was unsure of the cleaning or deep cleaning frequency. The facility also failed to consistently maintain hot food at or above the required temperature of 135°F during meal service. On one observation of the second-floor steam table, the first compartment held semi-hot water and the remaining compartments had lukewarm water while holding beef goulash, green beans, and bread. When temperatures were checked, the green beans measured 131.3°F, below the facility’s stated standard of 135°F or higher, while other items were 135°F or above. Several cognitively intact residents with multiple medical diagnoses, including multiple sclerosis, diabetes mellitus, COPD, heart disease, and mental health conditions, reported that hot meals were often cold or room temperature; one resident stated he had given his lunch tray away because the food was cold, and others stated that for the most part hot meals were room temperature or cold and that they could not ask for the food to be warmed. The regional dietary director stated that steam tables are plugged in and filled 30 minutes before meal service, take 10–15 minutes to warm up, and that hot foods should be held at 135°F or higher to keep food out of the danger zone because it is dangerous for residents.
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