Oxygen and Nebulizer Equipment Not Properly Dated or Stored
Summary
The facility failed to store, date, and label oxygen and nebulizer equipment properly for multiple residents who used respiratory therapy. Surveyors observed oxygen tubing, nasal cannulas, humidifier water bottles, nebulizer tubing, and masks that were undated, unlabeled, uncovered, or not stored in the manner described by facility policy. The report identified this issue for eight residents who had active oxygen or nebulizer orders and documented that staff could not provide evidence showing when the equipment had last been changed. Resident #5 had diagnoses including respiratory failure, centrilobular emphysema, congestive heart failure, severe dementia, dysphagia, and atherosclerotic heart disease. The resident had an active PRN oxygen order and a care plan directing oxygen use and pulse oximetry monitoring. However, vital sign documentation showed oxygen saturation readings only through 11/27/25, with no further monitoring documented despite the ongoing order. During observation, the resident’s oxygen tubing and nasal cannula were not dated, the tubing was hanging off the side of the bed, and the humidifier water bottle was not labeled. RN #200 confirmed the equipment was not dated and discarded the tubing and humidifier bottle. Resident #26 had diagnoses including acute and chronic respiratory failure with hypoxia and hypercapnia, obstructive sleep apnea, morbid obesity with alveolar hypoventilation, heart failure, hypertension, and depression. The resident had an active PRN oxygen order, and oxygen saturation readings were documented both on room air and while receiving oxygen, but the MAR/TAR did not show oxygen administration. Surveyors observed oxygen running in the room while the nasal cannula was not in use and lying off the side of the bed, with the concentrator tubing and humidifier tubing not dated and the humidifier bottle empty. RN #200 confirmed the tubing and humidifier bottle were not dated and that there was no water connected for use. Other residents had similar findings. Resident #61 had an active nebulizer order, but the nebulizer tubing and mask were not dated or labeled, and the resident stated staff did not change the tubing or mask. Resident #68 had an active PRN oxygen order, but the oxygen tubing and water bottle were not dated and the tubing was wrapped on the concentrator out of reach. Resident #14 and Resident #27 had nebulizer tubing and masks left uncovered and not dated, with one set on a bedside stand and the other on the floor. Resident #7’s oxygen tubing was not dated, and Resident #8’s nasal cannula and oxygen tubing were lying on the floor next to the concentrator. The facility policy stated that cannulas not in use should be stored in a plastic bag and that humidifier bottles must be dated and changed every 10 days.
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