Failure to Maintain Safe Oxygen Administration and Infection Control Practices
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide safe and appropriate oxygen administration and infection prevention practices for three residents receiving oxygen therapy. For one resident with respiratory failure and heart failure, surveyors reviewed the admission record, history and physical, MDS, and oxygen orders, which showed the resident required supplemental oxygen at 2 L/min to maintain oxygen saturation above 91%. During observations in the resident’s room on two separate days, the resident’s nasal cannula was found not labeled with an open date and was touching the floor. In a concurrent interview, the Infection Preventionist Nurse (IPN) stated that nasal cannulas should be labeled with the date opened for infection prevention and acknowledged there was no way to know when or if the nasal cannula had been changed because it was not dated. For a second resident with end-stage renal disease and peripheral vascular disease, the order summary indicated an order for oxygen at 3 L/min to maintain oxygen saturation above 92%. The MAR directed staff to change and label oxygen tubing and the plastic bag every night shift starting on the last day of the month and ending on the last day of the month, but documentation from the beginning of the month through the survey date showed the oxygen tubing had not been changed. The resident’s electronic medical record did not contain a care plan for oxygen administration. During an observation and interview in the resident’s room, the resident did not have a bag at the bedside for oxygen equipment, and the nasal cannula was touching the floor. The IPN stated that residents required a bag for their oxygen equipment for infection control and that when residents were not using the nasal cannula, it must be placed in the bag to prevent contamination with germs. For a third resident with respiratory failure and dependence on supplemental oxygen, the order summary showed an order for oxygen at 2 L/min three times a day for shortness of breath. The MDS and history and physical indicated the resident had intact decision-making capacity and required varying levels of assistance with ADLs. During two separate observations, the resident was seen using a motorized wheelchair without receiving oxygen. In a record review and interview, the IPN interpreted the order for oxygen three times a day to mean the resident required continuous oxygen and that all three shifts had to monitor continuous oxygen use; the IPN stated the resident should not be without oxygen, even when using the motorized wheelchair. In a subsequent observation in the resident’s room, the nasal cannula was found hanging from the restroom doorknob and touching the floor. The IPN stated this was not acceptable practice because the nasal cannula had to be placed in a bag and not touch the floor, and that the cannula could not be reused because it was contaminated. The facility’s policy on oxygen administration/respiratory supply required all residents on oxygen to be monitored by nursing staff, all oxygen supplies to be changed biweekly with date and time documented, and all supplies not in use to be placed in a bag for infection prevention control. Additional interviews with the IPN and the DON confirmed the facility’s expectations and policies regarding oxygen equipment management and infection prevention. The IPN stated that for residents receiving oxygen, nursing staff must label nasal cannulas with the open date, place nasal cannulas in a bag when not in use, avoid allowing tubing to touch the floor, and change oxygen equipment weekly or biweekly. The IPN stated that not dating oxygen cannulas meant staff would not know if the equipment was old and that this could potentially cause an infection. The DON stated that residents on oxygen should have a care plan because oxygen administration is a lifesaving issue and that such a care plan would outline interventions such as checking pulse, following the physician’s oxygen order, placing oxygen tubing in a bag when not in use, and changing oxygen tubing every two weeks. The DON also stated that nursing staff were required to label oxygen equipment with the open date, change equipment every two weeks, and place unused equipment in a bag, and that all staff were responsible for ensuring infection prevention practices were followed and that residents were continuously receiving oxygen as ordered.
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