Dishwashing Temperature Monitoring, Freezer Labeling, and Hair Restraint Failures
Summary
The facility failed to consistently track and monitor dishwasher temperatures for both the wash and rinse cycles and did not take timely action when temperatures were not within the required range. During observation, the dishwasher log for April showed wash temperatures recorded at 150 degrees F and rinse temperatures at 180 degrees F, while the low-temperature dishwasher itself was later observed with a wash temperature of 140 degrees F and a rinse temperature of 108 degrees F. Staff gave conflicting statements about the required temperatures, with one dietary aide stating the wash cycle should be 160 degrees F and the rinse cycle 180 degrees F, while another stated the machine was supposed to be 180 degrees F. The log used for April did not include a place to record rinse temperatures, and one meal entry was missing from the log. Review of the dishwasher documentation showed additional inconsistencies. January through March logs were titled as high-temperature dishwashing records and each entry listed 150 degrees F for wash and 180 degrees F for rinse, with no variation. In April, the log reflected wash temperatures between 119 and 130 degrees F and chemical sanitizer readings between 99 and 101 PPM, including an outlier of 120 on one breakfast entry. The facility’s own staff and administrator acknowledged that 99 and 101 were not options on the test strips, and the assistant administrator stated she would have recorded 100 PPM. The service technician’s manual later identified the machine as a low-temperature dishwasher requiring a wash temperature of 140 degrees F and a rinse temperature of 120 degrees F. The facility also failed to ensure food items were properly labeled, dated, and stored in the walk-in freezer. During the freezer tour, a half-full 20-pound bag of ice was stored on the floor, and multiple food items were found undated or unlabeled, including pancakes, breadsticks, chicken patties, sugar cookies, chocolate chip cookies, fruit, and patties in tied or open bags. A sealed bag of freezer-burnt berries with an unclear date was also present. The culinary service director stated food items were supposed to be checked routinely and that items should be dated so staff would know when they were placed in the freezer and when they should be used or discarded. The facility further failed to assure that proper hair and beard restraints were used by staff preparing food in the kitchen. During the initial tour, two dietary assistants were observed wearing hair bonnets, but their hair was not properly constrained. The culinary service director stated all dietary staff should wear hairnets or bonnets and beard masks to prevent hair from contacting exposed food, clean equipment, utensils, and linens.
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