Failure to Follow Legionella Water Management Plan and Hand Hygiene Practices
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to follow its legionella water management plan and to perform required hand hygiene during wound care and medication administration. The facility’s Water Management Plan (WMP) dated 04/12/19 identified the ice machine as a risk factor and required cleaning, disinfection, filter changes, documentation of all cleanings, and specific corrective actions and retesting if legionella was detected. Water testing on 03/10/25 showed the first-floor ice machine had two CFU/mL of legionella detected, while no other sampled areas were positive. A legionella flush-out form dated 03/25/25 documented a seven-day flushing protocol for the first-floor ice machine and beauty shop, with detailed steps including flushing hot and cold water, removing and disinfecting aerators, testing hot water parameters, documenting all activities, and retesting within seven days of the final day of flushing. Despite these requirements, the facility had no documentation of any retesting after the positive legionella result and completion of the seven-day flush-out ending 04/03/25. The Divisional Director of Clinical Education/Registered Nurse reported that follow-up testing was said to have been completed in August 2025 but confirmed that no evidence of such retesting could be located, and that 2026 legionella testing had not yet been completed. The Environmental Services Director did not recall the positive legionella result from March 2025 and did not recall any corrective actions beyond the initial seven-day flush-out, and also could not recall any retesting after the positive result. The facility’s Legionella Assessment and Prevention Program policy, revised 01/10/25, required that after positive results, mitigation steps be documented and water be retested to ensure it was free of bacterial growth, and also required annual testing at four specified water sources, including an ice machine. The deficiency also includes failures in hand hygiene during wound care for one resident. Resident #8, admitted 06/18/22, had multiple diagnoses including congestive heart failure, atrial fibrillation, atherosclerotic heart disease, anemia, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, chronic kidney disease, polyneuropathy, diabetes mellitus, osteoarthritis, gout, restless leg syndrome, benign prostatic enlargement, and cognitive communication deficit. Physician orders dated 02/16/26 directed daily cleansing of sacral and right gluteal pressure ulcer areas with Dakin’s solution, followed by application of pink polymem and foam dressing. During an observed dressing change on 03/31/26, an LPN gathered supplies, sanitized the over-bed table, performed hand hygiene, donned gloves, removed the soiled dressing, discarded it, removed gloves, and performed hand hygiene before donning new gloves and completing the wound treatment according to infection control standards. However, after completing the wound treatment, the LPN removed her soiled gloves and did not perform hand hygiene before touching the bed remote, adjusting the bed, handling bed linens, and touching other room surfaces. The LPN later confirmed she had not performed hand hygiene after glove removal, contrary to the facility’s Clean Dressing Change Policy effective 03/10/24, which required hand hygiene at multiple steps, including after glove removal and at the end of the procedure. A further deficiency was observed in hand hygiene during medication administration for another resident. Resident #100, admitted 03/25/26, had diagnoses including a fractured right humerus, Parkinson’s disease, mood and psychotic disturbance, atrial fibrillation, hypothyroidism, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, lymphedema, gastroesophageal reflux disease, and cognitive communication deficit. Physician orders directed administration of multiple oral medications and Xidra eye drops in the morning time window. During an observed medication pass on 03/31/25, an LPN used hand sanitizer at the medication cart and began dispensing the ordered medications, then discovered that one medication (omeprazole 20 mg) was not in the cart and needed to be obtained from central supply. The LPN locked the cart, used the elevator, moved a housekeeping cart, pushed elevator buttons, went to central supply to obtain the medication, then returned via the elevator and resumed dispensing medications into a medication cup without performing hand hygiene before continuing the task. The LPN then administered the oral medications to the resident. In a subsequent interview, the LPN acknowledged that hand hygiene should have been performed before resuming dispensing and administering medications, which was inconsistent with the facility’s Hand Hygiene Policy effective 09/01/11 that required hand hygiene immediately before touching a resident, before performing an aseptic task, after contact with contaminated surfaces, and immediately after glove removal.
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