Food Safety, Temperature Control, and Sanitation Deficiencies in Dietary Services
Summary
The deficiency involves multiple failures in food safety and sanitation practices in the facility’s dietary services. Surveyors observed contracted dietary staff working in the kitchen food preparation area without properly using beard restraints, despite a facility policy requiring hair and beard coverings at all times. One dietary aide with facial hair repeatedly entered and worked in the food preparation and tray assembly areas with his beard restraint either not in place or pulled down below his mouth, leaving his beard and mustache uncovered, including while standing directly over the steam table and loading trays into hall tray carts. Another dietary aide was observed serving trays over open plates of food with long sideburns exposed because his beard restraint did not fully cover his facial hair. The Dietary Manager acknowledged understanding the policy requirement for hair and beard restraints. Surveyors also identified problems with food temperatures and resident complaints about food quality and temperature. A test tray taken during the noon meal service showed a piece of baked chicken at 112°F, mashed potatoes with gravy at 119°F, and mixed vegetables at 105°F, which the Dietary Manager acknowledged were below the correct holding temperatures and inconsistent with the facility’s policies on cooking and holding food, including poultry at 165°F. Several cognitively intact residents reported that food was often cold or lukewarm, dry, overcooked, rubbery, tough, or otherwise of poor quality. Residents who typically ate in their rooms and received hall trays specifically reported that their food was sometimes or usually cold by the time it reached them. Grievance forms documented prior complaints that food quality was poor, food was cold, often late, and that items were sometimes unavailable. In addition, the surveyors observed that the hall tray food delivery carts used for the East and another hall at the noon meal were visibly soiled. The carts, which contained individual meal trays, cups with liquids, and eating utensils, had a heavy coating of brown debris along the bottom rails and on the wheels. This condition existed despite a facility policy requiring that trays and carts used to carry clean tableware and utensils be cleaned and sanitized daily or as often as necessary. The Dietary Manager stated that the carts were cleaned after every meal service and that the outside was wiped down as needed. The Administrator reported that dietary staff were contracted employees and stated she was aware of kitchen issues but believed she did not have authority over them.
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