Improper PPE Use and Sharps Handling During IV Insertion
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to maintain proper infection prevention and control practices during IV therapy for one resident. The resident was an elderly female with multiple diagnoses including diabetes mellitus, hyperkalemia, malnutrition, a displaced intertrochanteric fixation of the left femur, constipation, muscle weakness, overactive bladder, dysphagia, hypothyroidism, cognitive communication deficit, vitamin D deficiency, and a history of myocardial infarction. Her Quarterly MDS showed a BIMS score of 3, indicating poor cognitive status. She had active physician orders for IV sodium chloride infusions every shift for hydration, and her care plan included participation in an IV therapy infusion program. During an observed IV insertion attempt by an LVN, aseptic technique and standard precautions were not consistently followed. The IV tubing was placed on the resident’s sheets and blanket before administration, and the linens were visibly soiled with stains. The LVN inserted an IV catheter into the resident’s left wrist while wearing gloves that had a visible opening. After insertion, the IV needle was placed on the resident’s bed, causing blood to stain the linens, and then the needle was picked up and placed on the bedside table. The LVN removed her gloves, discarded them, and then connected the IV tubing to the catheter without wearing gloves. When it was determined that the IV was not properly placed, the catheter was removed without gloves. The LVN then handled the IV needle with bare hands and disposed of items into the resident’s trash before finally placing the needle into the sharps container and performing hand hygiene. Interviews with staff and leadership showed that the observed practices were inconsistent with facility policies and stated expectations. The LVN stated she only had one pair of gloves during the procedure and acknowledged that sharps such as needles and razors were to be placed in sharps containers and handled with gloves, but also reported she had not received in-person IV insertion training at the facility and had only completed online IV training. The ADON stated that gloves should be used for IV initiation, sharps should be handled safely and disposed of in sharps containers, contaminated linens should be changed immediately, and that policies were not consistently followed. The DON stated that gloves were to be consistently used, sharps disposed of immediately in sharps containers, staff were expected to have all necessary supplies available before starting procedures, and that based on the information provided, policies were not followed. The Administrator stated that syringes should not be left in resident rooms, sharps should be capped and placed in sharps containers after use, gloves were typically available in rooms, and that she was aware policies existed but could not recall them specifically or provide information on infection control training. Facility policies on standard precautions and infection control required hand hygiene, appropriate glove use, immediate disposal of contaminated sharps in puncture-resistant containers, and proper handling and bagging of soiled linens, which were not adhered to during the observed IV procedure. The facility’s written policies titled “Standard Precautions” and “Fundamentals of Infection Control Precautions” specified that handwashing is necessary after contact with blood or contaminated items and after glove removal, that gloves should be worn when touching blood and body fluids and during invasive procedures, and that gloves should be changed between resident contacts. The policies also required that needles not be bent or broken by hand, that contaminated sharps not be recapped using a two-handed technique, and that sharps containers be readily accessible, puncture-resistant, leak-proof, and not more than two-thirds full. Contaminated work surfaces were to be disinfected immediately, and all soiled linen was to be bagged at the site of use, handled as little as possible, and treated as potentially infectious. The policies further emphasized that used sharps are never recapped and must always be placed in puncture-resistant containers, and that consistent use of appropriate infection control measures, including PPE and hand hygiene, is required when caring for residents with vascular access catheters. The observed actions during the IV insertion for this resident did not conform to these written standards.
Penalty
Resources
Below are regulatory guidelines relevant to this citation:
Trusted data from CMS and state health departments
Every citation, penalty and Plan of Correction is sourced from public CMS records (latest release June 24, 2026) and official state health department websites — never guesswork.
Trusted by long-term care providers and associations.



