Failure to Disinfect Shared Glucometer
Summary
The facility staff failed to adhere to the manufacturer's instructions for cleaning and disinfecting a shared blood glucose meter between resident uses. This deficiency was observed during a survey when Nurse #1 was seen performing blood glucose checks on two residents without disinfecting the glucometer as per the manufacturer's guidelines. The glucometer was not cleaned with the required EPA-approved disinfectant wipes, which are necessary to prevent the spread of bloodborne infections. Instead, Nurse #1 used an alcohol swab, which is not an acceptable practice according to the facility's policy and the manufacturer's instructions. The facility's policy, revised in May 2024, clearly outlines the procedure for disinfecting glucometers, which includes using two disinfectant wipes to clean and disinfect the device thoroughly, followed by a two-minute air-dry time. However, during the observation, Nurse #1 did not follow these steps and admitted to forgetting the procedure due to nervousness. The nurse also lacked knowledge of the required wet and dry times for the disinfectant wipes, indicating a gap in training and adherence to the facility's infection control protocols. Interviews with the Infection Preventionist and the Director of Nursing revealed that the facility had provided education on glucometer disinfection, but Nurse #1 had not received the recent training. The Infection Preventionist confirmed that the facility did not have dedicated glucometers for each resident, relying instead on staff adherence to disinfection protocols. The Director of Nursing expressed surprise at the non-compliance, as the staff had been trained, and the process had not been an issue previously. The deficiency was identified as an immediate jeopardy situation, highlighting the potential risk of spreading bloodborne pathogens among residents.
Removal Plan
- Identify those recipients who have suffered, or are likely to suffer, a serious adverse outcome as a result of the noncompliance.
- All residents residing in the building that receive blood glucose monitoring at the time of the observation of non-compliance were identified, especially those that resided in the same household where the non-compliance occurred.
- All residents residing in household two that could have been affected by the deficient practice were seen by the medical provider, with orders received as necessary by the practitioner's assessment.
- All glucometers that are presently in the clinical spaces in the building were disinfected, per policy and manufacturer's recommendations.
- All diagnoses of residents in the building were reviewed to ensure that no one currently has an active diagnosis of a bloodborne pathogen.
- The policy and procedure for glucometer disinfection was reviewed and compared to manufacturer recommendations.
- The nurse found to be non-compliant with the glucometer disinfection process was re-educated with return demonstration, as were all nurses in the building at the time of the observation of non-compliance.
- All nursing staff that do (or could) perform glucose monitoring will be in-serviced on the glucometer disinfection process before being allowed to work.
- All staff members will also have a skills validation performed to ensure that they can perform the disinfection appropriately.
- Any staff that do not receive the education and skills validation will not be allowed to work until they are compliant with the educational training.
- The County Communicable Disease branch was notified of the infection control breach.
- Communication was also provided to the residents affected by the deficient practice and/or their responsible parties.
Penalty
Resources
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