Failure to Follow Infection Control Practices During Resident Care
Summary
Standard infection prevention and control practices were not followed for four residents during observed care activities. Resident 3 had diagnoses including chronic respiratory failure, spastic quadriplegic cerebral palsy, and seizures, and was severely impaired in cognitive skills and dependent for multiple activities of daily living. During an observation, an LVN provided care to Resident 3 without wearing the PPE required by the contact precaution sign posted on the room door. The LVN later stated that proper PPE is very important when providing care to residents under contact precautions because it helps prevent the spread of infections. Resident 8 had diagnoses including hemiplegia, hemiparesis following cerebral infarction, type 2 diabetes mellitus, and seizures, and was severely impaired in cognitive skills and dependent for multiple activities of daily living. During an observation, an RN supervisor flushed Resident 8's foley catheter without wearing a gown while the room was posted for enhanced barrier precautions. The RN supervisor stated that PPE is very important when providing care to a resident under enhanced barrier precautions because it helps prevent the spread of infection. The Infection Preventionist Nurse stated that staff must wear PPE when caring for residents in rooms under contact isolation or enhanced barrier precautions to contain contamination within the resident's immediate environment. Resident 10 had muscle weakness and a stage 4 pressure ulcer to the sacrum, with the MDS showing intact cognitive skills but dependence for many activities of daily living. During wound care, an RN supervisor placed a trash bag on the resident's bed next to the resident's leg, cleaned the sacral pressure ulcer, and disposed of soiled gauze in the bag. The resident's leg was observed resting on top of the trash bag containing soiled dressing materials. The RN supervisor stated the trash bag should not have been there and that the resident's leg should not touch a bag containing dirty gauze from a dressing change. The RN supervisor and another RN were also observed performing the dressing change without gowns, and the RN supervisor stated she did not wear a gown because the resident was not on isolation precaution. The Infection Prevention Nurse stated it was not acceptable to place a trash bag containing soiled dressing-change materials on top of a resident's bed. Resident 44 had chronic respiratory failure, traumatic brain injury, and seizures, and was severely impaired in cognitive skills and dependent for multiple activities of daily living. During an observation, an LVN wearing gloves touched the privacy curtain and the resident's linens, then used the same gloves to check G-tube residual and administer medications through the G-tube without changing gloves. The LVN stated she should have changed her gloves before administering medications via the G-tube due to infection control requirements. The Infection Prevention Nurse stated licensed staff must change gloves when performing different tasks during medication administration and must use clean gloves to prevent cross-contamination and avoid introducing microorganisms into the resident's G-tube.
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