Failure to Follow Hand Hygiene and Glucometer Disinfection Practices During Blood Glucose Testing
Summary
Facility staff failed to follow infection prevention and control practices during blood glucose monitoring for three residents with diabetes. The facility’s hand hygiene policy required staff to perform handwashing or use alcohol-based hand rub before and after resident contact and after contact with blood or body fluids, and the glucometer policy required cleaning and disinfection between residents per manufacturer instructions. The manufacturer’s directions specified a multi-step cleaning and disinfection process using appropriate towelettes after each patient use. The facility’s fingerstick glucose policy also required use of clean gloves, cleaning and disinfecting reusable equipment between uses, and handwashing after glove removal, but did not address use of a protective barrier under the glucometer and supplies. For one resident with moderate cognitive impairment and diabetes, an LPN removed the glucometer from the medication cart, placed it directly on the cart without a protective barrier, entered the room without performing hand hygiene, and applied gloves. After checking the resident’s blood sugar, the LPN again placed the glucometer directly on the cart without a barrier, did not sanitize the glucometer, and returned it to the basket with other blood sugar supplies. For another resident with severe cognitive impairment and diabetes, the same LPN placed the glucometer, alcohol pad, and lancet directly on the bedside table without a barrier, attempted a blood sugar check, then removed gloves and donned new gloves without hand hygiene. The LPN placed new supplies on the resident’s bed, used a lancet to obtain blood, used a gloved finger to wipe excess blood from the resident’s finger, removed one glove used to wipe the blood, placed the glucometer on the bed, then picked it up with an ungloved hand, left the room, placed the glucometer directly on the medication cart, handled medications without hand hygiene, and wiped the glucometer with an alcohol pad instead of the disinfectant wipes specified by the facility. For a third resident with intact cognition and diabetes, a CMT exited a resident’s room with the glucometer and placed it directly on the medication cart, inserted a new strip, and laid the alcohol pad and lancet on the cart without a protective barrier. The CMT then entered the resident’s room to obtain the blood sugar, exited, and again placed the glucometer directly on the medication cart without a barrier, wiping it only with an alcohol pad before returning it to the cart. In interviews, the LPN stated he/she used alcohol pads between residents, believed the facility wanted use of purple disinfectant wipes but was afraid to use them without gloves, did not know the manufacturer’s disinfection instructions, and acknowledged missing hand hygiene opportunities and the potential to spread blood-borne illness. The CMT reported using alcohol wipes to sanitize the glucometer, was unaware of the manufacturer’s instructions, and stated he/she had never been trained to use a protective barrier under the glucometer or supplies. The administrator and DON both stated that supplies should be placed on a clean surface or protective barrier, that staff were expected to perform hand hygiene at specified points during blood sugar testing, and that staff were to follow manufacturer instructions and use the purple-tub disinfectant wipes, noting that alcohol wipes were not sufficient to disinfect the glucometer.
Penalty
Resources
Below are regulatory guidelines relevant to this citation:
Trusted data from CMS and state health departments
Every citation, penalty and Plan of Correction is sourced from public CMS records (latest release June 24, 2026) and official state health department websites — never guesswork.
Trusted by long-term care providers and associations.



