Unlabeled Enteral Nutrition and Water Bags Used for Tube Feedings
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure enteral nutrition and water bags used for tube feeding were properly labeled and dated for two residents with active tube feeding orders. For one resident with diagnoses including type 2 diabetes mellitus, adult failure to thrive, mild protein-calorie malnutrition, and gastrostomy status, orders specified NPO status with Osmolite 1.2 at 100 mL/hr for 14 hours starting in the evening and water flushes at 40 mL/hr, along with enhanced barrier precautions related to enteral feedings. Surveyors observed two full bags, one containing enteral nutrition and one containing water, hanging at the bedside with lines attached but not yet connected to the resident. The formula was not in its original packaging but had been poured into an unlabeled plastic feeding bag. Neither the formula bag nor the water bag had any labeling to indicate the date or time of preparation, the type of formula, or the ordered rate. An LPN then entered the room, flushed the gastrostomy tube, connected the unlabeled bags to the resident, and started the feeding pump without adding any labels, and then left the room while the feeding was running, confirming in interview that both bags should have been labeled with date and time and acknowledging they were not. For a second resident with diagnoses including hemiplegia and hemiparesis following stroke, dysphagia following stroke, unspecified protein-calorie malnutrition, and gastrostomy, physician orders included continuous Glucerna 1.5 at 55 mL/hr with 50 cc water flushes every hour. The record also contained an order to change the tube feeding bag and tubing every night shift and to label new bags and bottles, including water, with name, date, time, and amount per hour. Surveyors observed at the bedside that the water bag hung next to the enteral nutrition bag was actively running to flush the tube feeding line but was not labeled with the date and time of preparation, although the enteral nutrition bag was labeled. In interview, an RN verified that the water bag was unlabeled, stated that water is usually prepared at the same time as the formula, and acknowledged that each individual bag should be labeled with date and time of preparation. These observations showed that the facility did not follow its own orders and labeling requirements for tube feeding products and water for both residents.
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