Improper Storage of Personal Items on Med Carts and Lapses in Hand Hygiene
Penalty
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to maintain an effective infection prevention and control program, specifically related to improper storage of personal items on medication carts and inadequate hand hygiene practices. On the 200 hall, a medication technician was observed with a personal water bottle placed on top of the medication cart; she acknowledged it was her bottle, that she had brought it out to drink, and that she did not have time to put it away. She further stated that personal water bottles were not allowed on top of the medication cart because of infection control concerns. On the 100 hall, a separate medication cart was observed with another personal water bottle on top. The LVN assigned to pass medications on that hall confirmed the water bottle was hers, explained she was thirsty and needed a drink, and stated that staff were not allowed to have personal items on the medication cart due to infection control concerns. The Administrator, Corporate Nurse, and DON each confirmed that staff were not to have personal items on top of medication carts because of contamination and infection control issues. The report also details a hand hygiene failure involving a resident with identified infection risks. Resident #9 was an elderly male with dementia, severe cognitive impairment (BIMS score of 7), and an active diagnosis of dementia. His care plan documented that he was at risk of infection related to dialysis access and required Enhanced Barrier Precautions during close contact care. Physician orders specified that enhanced barrier precautions and PPE were required for high resident contact care activities, with dialysis access to be monitored every shift. During medication administration for this resident, the same medication technician was observed sanitizing her hands, then picking up her keys from the floor, and failing to sanitize her hands again before donning clean gloves and entering the resident’s room to administer medication. In subsequent interviews, the medication technician, the LVN, and the DON each stated that hand hygiene was required after touching dirty surfaces, between residents, between glove changes, and before donning and after removing gloves, and that failure to perform hand hygiene could spread bacteria or germs and make residents sick. Review of the facility’s Infection Prevention and Control Program policy showed that personnel were required to wash their hands after each direct resident contact as indicated by accepted professional practice, and that infection prevention practices were to be monitored by the infection preventionist through skills competency evaluations such as observation of hand hygiene.
