Failure to Secure Wheelchair-Dependent Resident and Provide Supervision During Van Transport
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure adequate supervision and proper use of the transportation van’s restraining seatbelt for a wheelchair-dependent resident during transport. The facility had a written Transportation Policy and Passenger Assistive Techniques procedure requiring that residents who use wheelchairs be safely secured with passenger restraints and that seat belts be used for all passengers. The CNA responsible for transport had completed the Transportation Training Checklist and acknowledged the transportation policy and passenger assistive procedures, which included guidance on safe wheelchair transportation, use of restraints, and what to do if someone falls. The resident involved was admitted with multiple significant diagnoses, including hemiplegia and hemiparesis following cerebral infarction, chronic systolic (congestive) heart failure, type 2 diabetes mellitus with diabetic autonomic neuropathy, chronic pain due to trauma, cervical spinal stenosis, and COPD. A quarterly MDS assessment documented that the resident was cognitively intact with a BIMS score of 15, was dependent on a wheelchair for mobility, and required staff assistance with transfers using a lift. Despite this dependence on staff for safe mobility and transfers, the resident was transported in the facility van without the restraining lap belt being applied. During the return trip from a medical appointment, the resident reported to the CNA driver that she felt she was sliding down in her wheelchair. The CNA did not stop the van to reposition or secure the resident with the restraining seatbelt and continued driving until reaching her own personal residence. The CNA then left the resident unattended in the van while she went inside her residence. While unsupervised and not secured by a seatbelt, the resident slid out of the wheelchair onto the floor of the van. When the CNA returned, she found the resident on the floor but did not call the facility for assistance and did not transfer the resident back into the wheelchair. Instead, the CNA drove the resident back to the facility while the resident remained sitting on the floor of the van. Upon arrival, staff, including an LPN, observed the resident on the van floor and assisted with assessment and lifting the resident from the floor. The incident was determined by surveyors to constitute an Immediate Jeopardy situation on the date of occurrence.
Removal Plan
- Immediately assessed Resident #26 upon return to the facility.
- Terminated the employment of S4CNA.
- Updated the facility's transportation policy to state to call the facility in the event of a fall if non-emergent or to call 911 if it is an emergency.
- Completed an in-service with transportation drivers to communicate policy changes and perform competency checks on loading and unloading residents in wheelchairs; counseled drivers on never leaving residents unsupervised and on notifying nursing immediately in the event of a fall.
- Implemented mandatory monitoring by the DON or designee: checks upon arrival and departure 3 times per week to ensure residents are safely anchored in the van and properly seated; quiz transport drivers at each departure/arrival on who to call in the event of a fall; counsel on notifying nursing immediately in the event of a fall.
- Monitor compliance weekly at staff meetings and address at quarterly QAPI meetings and other intervals as needed to ensure compliance.
Penalty
Resources
Below are regulatory guidelines relevant to this citation:
Trusted data from CMS and state health departments
Every citation, penalty and Plan of Correction is sourced from public CMS records (latest release June 24, 2026) and official state health department websites — never guesswork.
Trusted by long-term care providers and associations.



