Overcooked Fried Fish Served Repeatedly to Cognitively Intact Residents
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure that food served to residents was palatable, attractive, and at a safe and appetizing temperature, specifically related to fried fish served at a lunch meal. Resident #5, who was cognitively intact with diabetes and on a low concentrated sweets diet with regular texture and thin liquids, reported that the fried fish served on a Friday lunch was overcooked and inedible. During observation in the dining hall, Resident #5 had not consumed his meal tray and demonstrated the condition of the fish by tapping it on the dining room table multiple times, producing a sound that indicated how overcooked it was. He stated that the kitchen served fried fish every Friday and that it was always overcooked, and that although staff would prepare another piece if he complained, he believed it should be cooked correctly the first time. Resident #6, who was also cognitively intact, on a regular diet with thin liquids and no significant weight change or swallowing disorder, was observed in the dining hall during the same lunch meal with only half of the fried fish consumed. He stated that he had not finished the fish because it was overcooked and inedible and similarly reported that fried fish served every Friday was always overcooked. He also indicated that staff would prepare another piece of fish if he reported the problem, but he felt it should be prepared correctly initially. Resident #6 demonstrated the overcooked condition of the fish by picking up the half-eaten piece and tapping it on the dining room table multiple times, producing a sound to show how overcooked it was. Resident #7, cognitively intact and on a therapeutic diet including low concentrated sweets with regular texture and thinned fluids, was observed in his room eating lunch obtained from a restaurant while his facility meal tray was at the bedside. He stated that he declined the facility’s lunch tray because on Fridays the kitchen prepared fried fish that was always overcooked and inedible. Staff interviews corroborated that the fish served to these residents was not palatable. The cook who prepared the fish reported that he began frying the fish at 10:00 a.m., placed it on the steam table, and later found that the temperature had dropped; he then reheated the fish so it would be at the appropriate temperature and believed that some of the fish could have been overcooked as a result. These observations and statements show that the facility did not adhere to its policy requiring food and drinks to be palatable, attractive, and at a safe and appetizing temperature.
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