Failure to Implement Legionella Controls and Enhanced Barrier Precautions
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to implement and monitor its Legionella Water Management Plan and to follow its own policies and CDC guidance for Legionella control. The written plan, dated 12/01/25, required flushing hot and cold water for three to five minutes in empty rooms and less frequently used outlets, including soiled utility rooms, medication rooms, shower stalls, private room showers, and eyewash stations, as well as cleaning, disinfecting, or replacing shower heads on a six‑month cycle. Review of facility documentation showed no evidence that these flushing tasks or shower head maintenance were completed. The Maintenance Director stated that flushing of less frequently used outlets was performed and tracked in TELS but acknowledged he was unaware that documented evidence of task completion was required and confirmed that shower heads were not cleaned, disinfected, or replaced every six months as required by the plan. CDC Legionella control guidance reviewed by surveyors recommended maintaining hot water above 140°F and flushing low‑flow piping at least weekly and infrequently used fixtures regularly. The facility also failed to implement enhanced barrier precautions (EBP) for residents with wounds and indwelling devices as required by its own policies and physician orders. One resident with multiple diagnoses including bladder injury, septic shock, ascites, diabetes, and chronic kidney disease had an abdominal wound and a physician order for EBP during wound care. During observed wound care to the abdomen and closed‑suction bulb drain site, an LPN did not don a gown, did not disinfect the bedside table before placing wound care supplies on it, and did not perform hand hygiene between glove changes. The LPN and the Assistant DON confirmed these omissions and acknowledged that a gown should have been worn, the table disinfected, and hand hygiene performed between glove changes. Another resident with chronic respiratory failure, tracheostomy status, and dependence for all care had care plan interventions and physician orders for EBP every shift and tracheostomy care every 12 hours. During observed tracheostomy care, an RN did not perform hand hygiene before entering the room or between glove changes, did not don a gown, and did not disinfect the bedside table before placing sterile tracheostomy supplies on it; the RN confirmed these failures. A third resident with dementia, diabetes, peripheral vascular disease, and a diabetic foot ulcer had ongoing wound treatments to the left toes and heel, but no EBP were in place during observations of routine care and transfers, and CNAs providing ADL assistance wore no PPE. An LPN confirmed the resident had a current wound, that there was no EBP signage or accessible PPE outside the room, and that EBP should have been in place. The ADON later verified that EBP had not been implemented for this resident until the previous day, despite wound treatment orders being in place since late February. Facility policies required EBP, including readily available gowns and gloves, for residents with chronic wounds or indwelling medical devices and specified hand hygiene after glove removal.
Penalty
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