Beachside Post Acute: Food Safety Violations - CA
LONG BEACH, CA - Federal inspectors documented multiple serious health and safety violations at Beachside Post Acute nursing home during an April 2025 survey, including frozen food stored at dangerously elevated temperatures that was still served to residents, improper food handling practices, and critical documentation errors that could have compromised resident care.
Frozen Food Stored at Unsafe Temperatures for Days
The most concerning discovery involved the facility's freezer for frozen vegetables maintaining a temperature of 10 degrees Fahrenheit for at least two days, significantly above the required 0 degrees or below. Despite this known temperature failure, kitchen staff continued using vegetables from the compromised freezer to prepare meals for residents.
During the April 9 inspection, the Dietary Manager confirmed to surveyors that "the kitchen used the vegetables from the non-working freezer for the stir fry vegetables that was served for lunch." The manager acknowledged that residents could be at risk for unsafe food because the vegetables were not properly stored.
A cook interviewed during the inspection stated he had pulled broccoli, carrots, zucchini and cauliflower from the malfunctioning freezer at 4:00 a.m. to prepare for the day's meals. All vegetables served at lunch that day came from the freezer that had been reading 10 degrees Fahrenheit since at least the previous day.
The facility's Registered Dietician revealed the temperature logs might have been falsified, as they showed 0-degree readings for several days when the freezer was actually malfunctioning. The dietician stated that all food items should have been discarded because "the facility does not know how long it had not been working."
Frozen foods must be maintained at 0 degrees Fahrenheit or below to prevent bacterial growth and preserve food quality. When frozen vegetables are stored at 10 degrees, ice crystals form and thaw repeatedly, creating an environment where bacteria can multiply. This temperature abuse can lead to foodborne illnesses, particularly dangerous for elderly nursing home residents with compromised immune systems.
Kitchen Staff Failed to Follow Basic Food Safety Protocols
Inspectors documented multiple instances of kitchen personnel handling ready-to-eat food without gloves during meal service. Staff were observed scooping cooked food items directly from serving trays to resident plates with bare hands during the lunch tray line.
In another incident, a cook donned a glove on one hand without washing hands first, used a microwave in the storage area, then returned to serving food on the tray line without removing the contaminated glove or washing hands. When questioned, the cook admitted he "should have removed his glove and washed hands before serving food in the tray line to prevent cross contamination."
Additionally, an open bag of frozen sausages was found improperly stored in the freezer without being sealed, exposing the food to freezer burn and potential contamination. The sausages showed visible ice crystals on their surfaces, indicating quality degradation from improper storage.
These violations of basic food handling procedures create opportunities for cross-contamination between raw and cooked foods, between contaminated surfaces and ready-to-eat items, and between different food allergens. For nursing home residents, many of whom have weakened immune systems, diabetes, or other conditions that make them more susceptible to foodborne illness, these lapses in food safety can have serious health consequences.
Critical Medical Documentation Errors Affected Resident Care
Beyond food safety issues, inspectors found significant documentation errors that directly impacted resident care. In one case, a resident with a below-knee amputation had medical records incorrectly stating he had an above-knee amputation. This error appeared in multiple assessments over six months, from September 2024 through March 2025.
The distinction between below-knee and above-knee amputation is medically significant. Below-knee amputees retain their knee joint, which provides better mobility options, different rehabilitation needs, and requires assessment of the remaining knee's range of motion. The facility's failure to correctly document this meant the resident's knee joint was never properly assessed for movement limitations.
Physical therapy staff confirmed that incorrect documentation "could affect future assessments and services provided, lead to missed opportunities to identify declines, and result in ROM decline."
In another documentation failure, physician orders for a resident's walking exercises specified using a two-wheeled walker when the resident actually required a platform walker due to limited hand function from hemiplegia. Restorative nursing aides recognized the error and used the correct equipment, but the official medical orders remained incorrect.
The resident affected by this error had severe limitations in both hands and would have been unable to safely grip a standard walker. Using incorrect mobility equipment could have resulted in falls, injuries, or prevented the resident from participating in essential mobility exercises needed to maintain function.