Failure to Follow Hand Hygiene and PPE Requirements During Incontinence Care
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to implement its infection prevention and control program, specifically related to hand hygiene and use of personal protective equipment (PPE) during incontinence care for two residents. Resident #1, a cognitively intact male with hypertension, aphasia, a feeding tube, and a wound, was on enhanced barrier precautions as reflected in his care plan. His care plan required proper signage, availability and use of PPE including gowns and gloves during high-contact care, and adherence to enhanced barrier precautions. Resident #2, a cognitively intact female with bilateral knee contractures and bladder incontinence, had a care plan directing staff to check for incontinence and to wash, rinse, and dry the perineal area and change clothing as needed after incontinence episodes. On the observed date, CNA B and CNA C entered Resident #1’s room to provide incontinence care. Both CNAs donned gloves without performing hand hygiene. Despite an enhanced barrier precaution sign and PPE available outside the room, neither CNA donned a gown before entering. CNA B cleansed Resident #1’s abdominal folds and perineal area using wet wipes and then turned the resident to clean his buttocks and thighs. The resident was noted to be wet and to have had a bowel movement; CNA B removed the soiled brief and discarded it. Without performing hand hygiene or changing gloves after handling the soiled brief and completing perineal care, CNA B applied a clean brief. Both CNAs then removed their gloves, took the trash, exited the room, and did not wash their hands. CNA B took the trash to the soiled closet and then proceeded directly to Resident #2’s room without hand hygiene. In Resident #2’s room, CNA B initially went to wash her hands but left before doing so to retrieve another bag of trash from Resident #1’s room, placed it in the soiled closet, and returned to Resident #2’s room. Without washing her hands, she donned gloves and prepared supplies; CNA C also donned gloves without hand hygiene. CNA B then cleansed Resident #2’s abdominal folds and perineal area, turned the resident to clean the buttocks and thighs, and removed a heavily urine-soaked brief. Without performing hand hygiene or changing gloves after handling the soiled brief, she applied a clean brief. Both CNAs positioned the resident, removed their gloves, took the trash, and left the room without washing their hands. In interviews, CNA C acknowledged she knew she was supposed to perform hand hygiene before resident contact, between care, and after glove removal, and to wear gowns for residents on enhanced barrier precautions, but stated she forgot. CNA B stated she knew she should perform hand hygiene before and after care and with each glove change but did not know she was supposed to change gloves between care, and admitted she did not wash her hands or change gloves between residents or between handling soiled and clean briefs, stating she had no reason and often forgot PPE when in a hurry. The ADON confirmed her expectation that staff perform hand hygiene before resident contact, between care, and with glove changes, and wear PPE for residents on enhanced barrier precautions, and acknowledged that CNA B had been employed for three weeks without receiving infection control training, despite facility policies requiring staff training and adherence to hand hygiene and PPE use.
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