Failure to Follow Approved Menus, Portion Standards, and Maintain Food/Condiment Availability
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to serve protein entrees and other menu items according to the facility-approved menus, standardized recipes, and portion guidelines for all residents receiving oral diets other than pureed diets. On the identified survey date, the census was 58 residents, with 7 on pureed diets, 1 NPO, and the remainder on regular, mechanical soft, low concentrated sweets, or no added salt diets. During lunch service, multiple residents were observed receiving bowls of jambalaya that contained mostly rice with only a few pieces of sausage, chicken, and beans. A test tray was obtained, and when the protein components were separated and weighed in the presence of the Administrator, the total protein was less than 1 ounce, despite the facility’s recipe card and diet spreadsheet specifying that the jambalaya entree should be served with an 8‑ounce spoodle and provide 2 ounces of protein. The Food Service Manager acknowledged that the cook should have served two 4‑ounce scoops to meet the required portion and stated that cooks were expected to review recipes to determine correct serving sizes and utensils. Residents, including the Resident Council President, reported that entree portions were very small, such as small squares of fried fish, and that the facility often did not serve the planned menus or ran out of foods like apple juice, butter, cereal, cheese, ham, and other items. Several residents stated that the facility frequently ran out of condiments such as sugar, salt, pepper, ketchup, mustard, and mayonnaise, and that juice was sometimes unavailable when it was listed on the menu. One resident reported having to save sugar packets from previous meals and share them with another resident because sugar was not provided with coffee. Residents also stated that they had repeatedly voiced these concerns during resident council meetings and at meals, but no resolutions were provided, leading at least one resident council leader to stop speaking up. Staff interviews and kitchen observations corroborated these concerns. CNAs reported that residents complained the facility ran out of condiments and that the planned menus were not always followed, with juice sometimes unavailable when it was supposed to be served. Kitchen staff, including cooks and food service workers, stated that the facility had been out of butter packets for at least a week and out of salt and pepper packets for several days, and that items such as cucumbers, tomatoes, and onions were not in stock. The Food Service Director confirmed that the facility was out of sugar, salt, pepper, and butter packets and that brown sugar was not available. The Food Service Director also explained that chef salads on the substitution list were limited to lettuce, American cheese, and deli meat, and only included tomato or cucumber if those items happened to be on the menu and in stock, as they were not specifically ordered for substitution salads, despite the facility’s written requirements that menus and standardized recipes be followed and that diet spreadsheets reflect appropriate portions for regular and therapeutic diets.
Penalty
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