Infection Control Failures in Respiratory Illness, PPE Use, Laundry, Ice Handling, and Water Management
Summary
The facility failed to follow CDC guidance for managing residents with respiratory illness for three residents reviewed. The Infection Control Preventionist reported that residents with cough, congestion, dry cough, and other respiratory symptoms were tested for COVID-19 but not for influenza, and stated the facility did not have an influenza policy and would rely on the physician’s recommendations. The ICP also acknowledged that CDC guidance recommends testing symptomatic residents for both SARS-CoV-2 and influenza. Resident #60 had diagnoses including acute and chronic respiratory failure, COPD, atrial fibrillation, heart failure, chronic kidney disease, prior stroke, pneumonia history, hypothyroidism, hypertension, and anxiety, and was observed on oxygen at 4 liters by nasal cannula with an empty humidification container. The resident’s record showed cough, low oxygen saturations in the 80s, a chest x-ray with right lung infiltrates, antibiotics, breathing treatment, prednisone, and transfer out after oxygen saturation dropped to 76%. The facility also failed to prevent cross contamination involving ice scoopers and ice containers and failed to provide a workspace that prevented cross contamination of linen. During a group meeting, residents reported that other residents were getting into hallway ice buckets and using the ice scooper, including one resident seen picking their nose and then getting into the ice containers. The ICP stated staff were supposed to send the ice back to dietary to be cleaned, and acknowledged that residents getting into the ice was an issue. In the laundry area, the washing machine was positioned adjacent to and facing the hopper, with the door handle on the side opposite the walkway, requiring staff to move past the hopper to access it. The DOHS stated the hopper was used frequently and that the tight space made it difficult for staff to work around and load linen. The facility failed to follow CDC guidance for Transmission Based Precautions and PPE use during wound care for Resident #45. The resident had a very large sacral wound with a history of infection with a multidrug-resistant organism and an indwelling urinary catheter, and was on Enhanced Barrier Precautions. During wound care, the nurse wore gloves and an isolation gown, cleansed the wound, removed gloves, performed hand hygiene, replaced gloves, and packed the wound with Dakins-soaked rolled gauze. She then used her hands to pack the gauze into the wound with deep tunneling, did not remove gloves and perform hand hygiene before applying the top dressing, and later went to the treatment cart in the hallway while still wearing a soiled gown. The facility also did not have an active plan for reducing the risk of legionella and other opportunistic pathogens of premise plumbing. Observations found a bathroom out of order with a leak, a main hall med room sink with no water flow and dried brown substance in a bin under the plumbing, tubs that were used but whose flushing status was unknown, yellow discolored water from a tub faucet, a hopper with a pool of water and a slow stream from the hot water line, a spray hose shut off, and a bathroom sink that discharged black particulates before running clear. Interviews showed the water management team had not met, flushing was done only when prompted by Tels, and there was no flushing log.
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