Food Storage, Sanitation, and Temperature Control Deficiencies in Dietary Services
Summary
Facility staff failed to store, prepare, distribute, and serve food in accordance with professional standards in the main kitchen and on one resident hallway. During a kitchen observation, surveyors noted multiple soiled or improperly cleaned food-contact items, including a cutting board with dried red debris, ladles with yellow debris and a noodle attached, baking sheets with thick white debris, and a cake mixer guard and stand with white debris and the electrical cord stored inside the mixing bowl. Clean dish storage was also deficient: steam pans were stacked while still wet, and baking sheets on a rack were dripping water onto the floor. In the refrigerator, an unlabelled, undated 2‑quart container with a thick yellow substance identified by the dietary manager as butter was found. In dry storage, an open, undated bag of potato chips was not closed after opening, a blue bag of parboiled rice was left open inside a 25‑lb box, and a container of chicken base was found with the lid off on a cart. These conditions were inconsistent with the facility’s written policies requiring utensils and food-contact surfaces to be clean and sanitized after each use and dry goods to be properly sealed and date marked. Hot food holding and service temperatures were also not maintained according to professional standards and facility policy. Immediately prior to lunch tray preparation, surveyors measured five hot food items below the facility’s stated acceptable serving temperature of 135°F: mashed potatoes at 123.5°F, puréed peas at 133.3°F, gravy at 134.4°F, puréed burger at 110.0°F, and ground beef hamburger at 127.0°F. Despite these readings, staff proceeded to serve the lunch meal with the temperatures as recorded. The facility’s Dining Services policy specified that all foods would be held at appropriate temperatures greater than 135°F for hot holding, but this was not followed during the observed meal service. On a resident hallway, staff distributed expired milk and failed to ensure proper sanitization of utensils and warewashing. During breakfast tray distribution, 12 individual milk cartons on resident trays and in the ready-to-distribute supply were observed with an expiration date of the previous day. A CNA reported that dietary staff place milk in an ice-filled container on the tray cart and CNAs add milk to trays per resident request, and that dietary staff are responsible for checking expiration dates, while nursing staff are responsible for double-checking before serving. The Dining Services Director later confirmed that she and dietary aides are responsible for checking milk dates and acknowledged that expired milk had been placed in the hallway milk bucket and not identified by dietary or nursing staff. Surveyors also observed improper sanitization of a pizza cutter and other utensils and equipment at the three-compartment sink. After a pizza cutter fell to the floor, a dietary district manager briefly dipped it in the wash, rinse, and sanitizer sinks, leaving it in the sanitizer for less than three seconds before returning it for use in lunch service, contrary to the Dining Services Director’s statement that utensils should be immersed in sanitizer for at least 60 seconds. Additional observations showed a dietary staff member washing plastic tongs and submerging them in sanitizer for only 2–3 seconds before placing them in a drying rack. Later, corporate and facility dietary staff washed trays and dome covers, with observed sanitizer contact times ranging from approximately 3.38 to 40.83 seconds, and some dome covers not fully submerged in the sanitizer solution. Manufacturer instructions for the Oasis 146 Multi‑Quat sanitizer required exposure of food-contact surfaces to the sanitizing solution for at least one minute. Further, staff did not maintain separation between soiled and clean items and did not follow glove-use and cart-cleaning practices described in facility policy. A dietary staff member collected used plates and dome covers from meal carts onto a black utility cart while wearing one glove, picked up a plastic juice cup from the floor with the gloved hand, and then moved all items to the sink area. Without cleaning the cart, the staff member then used the same cart to receive washed dome lids from the sanitizer sink and stacked them on the visibly wet and debris-contaminated cart surface before transporting them to a storage rack in the kitchen. The dietary manager later stated that carts were supposed to be cleaned daily and after dirty items were placed on them, and that dishes had to go into sanitizer and then air dry, but she also stated there was no required time they had to sit in the sanitizer, which conflicted with the manufacturer’s instructions and the facility’s manual warewashing policy.
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