Failure to Follow EBP, Hand Hygiene, and Glucometer Disinfection Protocols
Summary
Surveyors identified that the facility failed to follow its own Enhanced Barrier Precautions (EBP) and hand hygiene policies, as well as its glucometer disinfection procedures. For a resident with a history of MRSA and MDRO infection and Moisture Associated Skin Damage (MASD) on the back of the thighs, an EBP sign at the room door instructed staff to wear gown and gloves for high-contact care such as hygiene and brief changes. The resident’s comprehensive care plan also directed staff to wear gowns and gloves during high-contact care. However, during peri care, a nursing assistant wore gloves but did not don a gown, despite gowns and gloves being available in the room. The nursing assistant reported being unsure if a gown was required, and other nursing assistants demonstrated inconsistent understanding of which residents were on EBP and which activities, such as peri care and oral care, were considered high-contact. The infection preventionist later confirmed that peri care is a high-contact activity requiring gown and gloves for residents on EBP, and the resident reported that staff do not wear gowns during peri care or transfers. Surveyors also observed multiple failures in hand hygiene practices despite facility policies requiring hand hygiene before and after resident contact, and before donning and after removing gloves. Medication aides were seen putting on gloves to provide care, including insulin administration, without performing hand hygiene beforehand, and one aide changed gloves without performing hand hygiene between glove changes. Another observation showed staff transferring a resident to the toilet, performing peri care, and changing the resident’s brief without performing hand hygiene before gloving or when changing gloves. One nursing assistant confirmed there was no hand sanitizer in resident rooms and that they did not have any. Staff interviewed acknowledged that they should have performed hand hygiene before putting on gloves and when changing gloves. The administrator confirmed that no audits were being conducted on EBP or handwashing practices, while the infection preventionist stated that the facility’s expectation was hand hygiene before and after all resident care and with all glove use. In addition, the facility did not follow its policies for cleaning and disinfecting blood glucose monitors between residents. The policies required cleaning and disinfecting the glucometer after each use, including using a disinfectant wipe and allowing appropriate drying time, to prevent transmission of bloodborne diseases. During medication administration, an LPN obtained a blood glucose level for one resident, then placed the glucometer on the medication cart without cleaning or disinfecting it. The same un-sanitized glucometer was then used to obtain a blood glucose level for another resident, again without any cleaning or disinfection between uses, and was later stored in the medication cart drawer still un-sanitized. The LPN confirmed that the glucometer had not been cleaned or disinfected and acknowledged it should have been, and the DON stated that the facility’s expectation was that glucometers are cleaned and disinfected between each resident use.
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