Failure to Implement Enhanced Barrier Precautions and Hand Hygiene During IV and Medication Care
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to implement and follow its infection prevention and control program, specifically related to Enhanced Barrier Precautions (EBP) and hand hygiene. Surveyors found that staff did not consistently use gowns along with gloves for high-contact care activities for residents with indwelling devices and chronic wounds, despite facility policy and CDC guidance. The facility’s policy on Transmission-Based Precautions stated that EBP were to be used for residents with open chronic wounds, indwelling medical devices such as PICC lines, or colonization with multidrug-resistant organisms, and that staff were to use gowns and gloves for high-contact care including dressing, bathing, transferring, hygiene, changing linens, device care, and wound care. EBP were intended to be in place for the resident’s entire length of stay unless the device was removed or the wound healed. One resident with a non-pressure chronic right foot ulcer, a wound vac, and a PICC line was identified as requiring EBP per the care plan and provider orders. On multiple observations, there was no EBP signage or other identifying symbol on the room door or frame, and PPE such as gowns was not readily available. The resident reported that staff only wore gloves, not gowns, when changing the wound vac. During IV care, an RN washed hands and donned gloves but did not wear a gown while disconnecting IV medication and flushing the PICC, and later again performed PICC access and IV medication administration with gloves only and no gown. A flower symbol indicating EBP was added to the door frame weeks after admission, but PPE remained not readily available in the room. Another resident with pneumonia and a history of bladder infection had a PICC line placed for IV antibiotics. The care plan documented antibiotics for a bladder infection but did not include EBP related to the PICC, and there were no provider orders for EBP despite active orders for PICC dressing changes. Observations showed the resident in bed with an IV pump and evidence of recent IV use, but no EBP signage or PPE readily available. The resident stated that staff wore gloves and a mask, but not gowns, when changing the PICC dressing. A flower symbol indicating EBP was placed on the door frame more than a month after PICC insertion, and PPE was still not readily available. Multiple staff, including nursing assistants, RNs, the Resident Care Manager, the Infection Preventionist, and the DON, described that EBP required gloves and gowns for high-contact care and that flowers on door frames were used to indicate EBP, but acknowledged that EBP should have been implemented and followed for these residents. The deficiency also included failures in hand hygiene during medication administration. In one observation, an RN put on gloves without performing hand hygiene, drew up insulin, walked down the hall wearing the same gloves, and administered insulin to a resident. After removing gloves, the RN did not perform hand hygiene and immediately began dispensing medications for another resident, handling over-the-counter vitamins with bare hands before later performing hand hygiene and administering the medications. In another observation, a different RN sanitized hands and donned gloves, then used the same gloves to open blinds, adjust the bed and light, remove old IV bags, hang new IV medication, wipe the IV cannula, flush the IV line, connect the new IV bag, adjust pillows, retrieve an additional pillow, and pick up a cup from the floor before administering the remainder of the resident’s medications. Both nurses later acknowledged they should have performed hand hygiene at appropriate times, and the Infection Preventionist and DON stated that hand hygiene should be performed before glove application, after glove removal, before dispensing medications, after medication administration, between residents, and after touching items in the room.
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