Failure to Implement Transmission-Based Precautions, Hand Hygiene, and TB Screening
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to maintain an effective infection prevention and control program, including proper use of transmission-based precautions and adherence to hand hygiene and tuberculosis (TB) screening policies. One resident with acute and subacute infective endocarditis and a recent diagnosis of Clostridioides difficile (C. diff) was admitted with a PICC line and an active treatment plan for C. diff. Hospital records showed this resident had been placed on Contact plus precautions in the hospital, and the facility’s own admission nursing note documented the C. diff diagnosis and IV antibiotic therapy. Despite this, the resident was not placed on contact precautions upon admission, and a physician’s order for contact precautions was not obtained until the day after admission. During the initial facility tour, no contact precaution signage was posted outside the resident’s room, and the Regional Nurse Consultant later confirmed the resident should have been on contact precautions at admission. After contact precautions were ordered and signage was posted, staff still failed to follow the required personal protective equipment (PPE) practices. A CNA entered the C. diff-positive resident’s room wearing only gloves, despite a sign indicating contact precautions and the need for both gown and gloves. While in the room, the CNA adjusted the resident’s position, raised the bed, moved the bedside table, and removed juice glasses, then exited the room without having worn a gown. The CNA stated she did not know the resident was on contact precautions, even though the sign was present, and the Regional Nurse Consultant confirmed staff were required to wear a gown when entering that room. In a separate incident, another resident was placed on droplet precautions due to a cough and pending testing for influenza and RSV, with a physician’s order and a sign instructing staff to wear a mask and gloves. An MDS nurse entered this resident’s room without a mask or gloves and later acknowledged she had not followed the sign, explaining she had mistaken the droplet precaution sign for enhanced barrier precautions. Additional deficiencies were identified in hand hygiene and TB screening practices. During observed incontinence care for another resident, two CNAs performed perineal care, including cleansing areas with visible smears of bowel movement, and changed gloves twice without performing hand hygiene between glove changes. Both CNAs later verified they had not washed their hands between glove changes, contrary to the facility’s Hand Washing-Hygiene policy, which requires hand hygiene after removing gloves. The facility also failed to complete TB screening in accordance with its policies for two newly admitted residents. One new admission had no documentation that a TB skin test was completed within 48 hours of admission, as required by the facility’s Tuberculosis Screening policy. Another resident had a physician’s order for a Mantoux step one TB test, but the MAR showed no nurse sign-off and no documentation explaining why the test was not administered, and progress notes contained no information about the missing test. The Regional Nurse Consultant confirmed there was no documented evidence that this TB test had been given.
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