Food Storage, Sanitation, Beard Covering, and Meal Timing Deficiencies in Dietary Services
Summary
The deficiency involves failure to store, label, and handle food in accordance with professional standards for food safety. During an initial kitchen tour, surveyors observed multiple undated and opened food items in dry storage, including bags of chicken and herb stuffing, vanilla wafers, miniature graham cracker pie crusts, large graham cracker pie crusts, and a muffin in a bag, all without received or expiration dates. In the main refrigerator, a pan containing cheese slices, tomatoes, and lettuce had no date, and a box of zucchini contained cut, wilted pieces. In the freezer, a chocolate cream pie and an opened bag of waffles lacked received or expiration dates. Staff later acknowledged the importance of labeling food to know when it expired and to prevent bacteria. The facility also failed to maintain a sanitary kitchen environment. Surveyors observed food debris on the bottom shelf of a small freezer, an unclean juice machine with dirt debris covering the filter, ovens with food debris and thick dirt on the outside, and a plate warmer with brown splatter on all sides. Additional observations included dirty shelving under the mixer, dirty rags on a stool near the dishwasher, a toaster with crumbs and brown splatter, and unclean counters with food on them. The floor in the back of the kitchen had food debris, gloves, and garbage, and a sheet pan holding vegetable oils and vinegars under the steamer was soiled with spilled oils and dirt. At the kitchen entrance, there was an approximately three-foot area of broken tiles along the wall and floor with thick dirt debris, and a bucket on the floor collecting water from an active leak. The ice machine had dust and dirt buildup on its exterior surfaces, and the March and April cleaning schedules showed multiple omissions. The Dietary Manager and Maintenance Director stated the broken tiles were not a cleanable surface and that it was important to keep equipment and the kitchen clean to prevent bacteria and foodborne illness. Additional deficiencies were observed in staff use of beard coverings and timeliness of meal service. A cook and the Dietary Manager were seen wearing beard covers that did not fully cover their long, thick mustaches and beards while handling and plating food, and one cook stood over food reading meal tickets with facial hair partially uncovered. A resident reported having hair in their food the previous evening. Surveyors also observed that meal trays were sent to the dining room about an hour after the scheduled meal times on multiple days, with plating not started at the listed meal time. Several residents reported that lunch was frequently late, that meals had been over an hour late, and that the delay left them with very little time to finish their meals before scheduled activities. Staff stated it was important to start meal service on time, particularly for residents with diabetes who received insulin and for residents with outings, and that beard coverings were required to cover all facial hair as a physical contaminant control.
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