Infection Surveillance and EBP Deficiencies
Summary
The infection prevention and control program failed to include ongoing surveillance, analysis, and trending of resident and staff infections. Review of the infection surveillance report for 1/1/26 through 3/31/26 showed resident name, room number, infection onset date, signs and symptoms, status, and pharmacy orders, but the report had missing signs and symptoms data and no evidence of analysis, identification of patterns or trends, implemented interventions, or required precautions. Review of the employee line list printed 4/22/26 also showed employee name, department, title, date, and symptoms, but it likewise lacked evidence of analysis, patterns or trends, interventions, or precautions. The facility could not provide documentation showing analysis, trending, or evaluation of infection data. The infection preventionist, an RN employed at the facility for about one month, stated infections were tracked in the EMR, but the data reviewed for February and March 2026 did not include comprehensive information such as signs and symptoms and primarily included infections associated with medication orders. The RN confirmed gaps in the surveillance process and stated monthly analysis is important to identify trends or patterns and initiate interventions. The RN also stated there was no awareness of a current list of reportable communicable diseases and could not describe the reporting protocol for communicable diseases, healthcare-associated infections, or potential outbreaks. The interim DON and the RN stated they were not aware of employee illness tracking processes, while the administrator stated the facility had a document tracking employee illnesses but it had not been shared with the infection preventionist and was not used for trending or analysis. The facility also failed to ensure adherence to enhanced barrier precautions for two residents with wounds and device-related care needs. One resident had paraplegia, pressure ulcers to the buttocks and sacral area, and a suprapubic catheter with a history of chronic infections and ESBL in urine. Although an EBP sign was observed on the resident’s door, staff repeatedly could not locate a PPE cart or gowns in the room, and the doffing receptacle was placed on top of a drawer unit and was hard to reach. The resident stated staff did not wear gowns when emptying the catheter or changing the dressing. Nursing staff and the infection preventionist confirmed the lack of gowns and the absence of the PPE cart, and the infection preventionist stated the resident should have had a PPE cart outside the door and that staff were not being monitored for EBP adherence. A second resident had a coccyx wound and required wound care. During observation, an LPN completed wound care without wearing a gown and stated she was unsure whether a gown was required and did not see an EBP sign or supply cart outside the room. The resident stated she did not recall staff wearing gowns when changing her brief or providing wound care. Later, the room had an EBP sign and a cart with gowns outside the door. The interim DON stated EBP would be expected for wounds requiring a dressing to prevent spread of infection.
Penalty
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