Failure to Disinfect Glucometers Properly
Summary
The facility failed to ensure that nursing staff were competent in following manufacturer's guidelines for cleaning and disinfecting glucometers. Nurse #1 was observed using a shared glucometer without disinfecting it before or after use on Resident #35. The glucometer was shared between Resident #35 and Resident #31, and Nurse #1 mistakenly believed it was individually assigned to Resident #35. This oversight occurred because Nurse #1 did not recall the proper disinfection procedure and there were no disinfectant wipes available on the medication cart at the time. Additionally, Medication Aide #1, an agency staff member, was observed using an individually assigned glucometer for Resident #32 and cleaning it with alcohol wipes instead of the approved disinfectant wipes. Medication Aide #1 was unaware of the presence of disinfectant wipes on the medication cart and had not checked for them. Although she had received training on the proper procedure, she did not follow it during the observation. The facility's Director of Nursing confirmed that some glucometers were shared among residents and should be disinfected with EPA-approved wipes after each use. However, there was no documentation of recent educational in-services on this procedure since September 2024. The lack of proper disinfection practices potentially exposed residents to blood-borne infections, as some residents in the facility had diagnoses that included blood-borne pathogens.
Removal Plan
- Nurse #1 was removed from the schedule and will be educated with a competency prior to returning to work.
- Current residents that receive finger stick blood sugar checks are at risk. Forty residents require FSBS and all forty have been provided their individual glucometer. The Assistant Director of Nursing completed an audit.
- Current residents who require finger stick blood sugars received their own individual glucometers and they were labeled and placed in an individual container. This was completed by the Director of Nursing and the Assistant Director of Nursing.
- Education was started by the Director of Nursing to current licensed nursing staff, including agency staff, on proper procedure for cleaning glucometers and for proper storage of glucometers.
- Employees not receiving this education will not be allowed to work until the education is received. The Director of Nursing will track the education to ensure that current staff have received.
- Education includes each resident who receives a finger stick blood sugar will have an individual glucometer that is labeled with their name and stored in an individual container inside the med cart. Education also includes the proper cleaning technique as recommended by the manufacturer guidelines. The cleaning product will be kept on each medication cart.
- The Director of Nursing or charge nurse will check the med carts daily to ensure that the cleaning product is present on each med cart.
- Current Licensed Nurses will complete a skills return demonstration on glucometer cleaning and storage. This will be completed by the Director of Nursing. Any licensed nurse will not be allowed to work until return demonstration has been completed.
- The Director of Nursing or charge nurse is responsible for ensuring new admissions who require finger stick blood sugars are provided with their own individual glucometer that is labeled with their name and stored in an individual container.
- New licensed nurses will receive this education and verify competencies during the orientation process by the Director of Nursing or charge nurse. Agency nurses will receive this education and competencies prior to the start of their shift.
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 May 27, 2026) and official state health department websites — never guesswork.
Trusted by long-term care providers and associations.



