Failure to Ensure Safe and Properly Planned Discharges for Two Cognitively Intact Residents
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide safe, appropriate, and properly planned discharges for two cognitively intact residents, resulting in noncompliance with federal requirements for transfer, discharge, and discharge planning. For the first resident, who had diagnoses including acute pulmonary embolism, acute respiratory failure, type 2 diabetes, unspecified affective disorder, and Parkinson’s disease without dyskinesia, the facility arranged same-day transportation through an outside transport company to return the resident to an assisted living facility (ALF). The Social Services Director documented that transportation was scheduled for late afternoon, but the clinical record did not contain documentation of the actual pickup date and time. The transport company later reported that the request was canceled because it did not meet their required notice time. The resident was removed from her room and placed in the activities room to wait, and staff repeatedly told her that transportation was on the way. As the day progressed, key administrative staff left the building while the resident continued to wait. The ADON reported that when he left around early evening, the resident was at the nurse’s station asking about her ride, and he told her that the ALF was coming to pick her up. He later received text messages from an RN indicating that the resident was upset and wanted to leave, followed by another message that she had left. The NHA stated that staff assumed the resident had left with her ride, even though no one actually saw her get into a vehicle. The resident reported that she had been waiting for transportation for several hours, that “the big wigs left,” and that the night nurses did not know what to do with her. She stated she eventually pushed open the door and left the facility in her wheelchair without staff awareness. She described self-propelling in the road, not knowing the route to her ALF, and being found on the side of the street by passersby who called 911. An ER physician note documented that she reported waiting all day, becoming tired of waiting, leaving, and being found on the side of the street in her wheelchair before being transported to the ER. For the second resident, who had diagnoses including degenerative disc disease, type 2 diabetes due to other mental disorder, and adjustment disorder with mixed anxiety and depressed mood, the facility discharged him to another nursing home in a different county without a documented medical reason that met regulatory criteria for transfer or discharge. A psychiatric progress note described the resident as unstable with episodes of agitation related to situational concerns about being transferred to a new nursing home. The discharge summary indicated he was being discharged to another nursing home, and a discharge order was entered without specifying the reason for transfer, level of care, or assistance needed. The written transfer and discharge notice given to the resident stated that his health had improved sufficiently so he no longer needed the services of the facility, but the resident refused to sign the form. The Social Services Assistant confirmed that the resident was not given a 30-day written notice and only received an undocumented verbal notice of about three weeks. The NHA stated that the resident was transferred because the facility was transitioning to more short-term beds, and the ADON confirmed there was no medical reason for the transfer, that the resident still needed LTC, and that the receiving facility did not provide any additional care beyond what the discharging facility could provide. The resident reported he had been told he would be evicted if he did not choose a place, that he selected one facility but was transported to another, and that after subsequent hospitalization the new facility would not readmit him, leaving him to arrange and pay for his own transportation and live in hotels.
Plan Of Correction
F627 Appropriate Discharge (1) What corrective action(s) will be accomplished for those residents found to have been affected by the deficient practice? On , Resident #1 was discharged from the facility. On , Resident #2 was discharged from the facility. (2) How you will identify other residents having potential to be affected by the same practice and what corrective actions will be taken. On , NHA/Designee completed a quality review of residents discharged in the previous 30 days to ensure appropriate transportation was provided and to ensure residents/responsible parties that refuse to sign the Nursing Home Transfer Discharge Notice for non-emergent situations are provided a full 30 day notice with an appropriate reason. Any concerns noted were immediately corrected. (3) What measures will be put into place or what systematic changes you will make to ensure that the practice does not recur. By , The NHA/Designee completed education with current social services staff and IDT team members on ensuring appropriate transportation was provided and to ensure residents/responsible parties that refuse to sign the Nursing Home Transfer Discharge Notice for non-emergent situations are provided a full 30 day notice with an appropriate reason. Any concerns noted were immediately corrected. Newly hired Social Services staff and IDT team members will be educated on ensuring appropriate transportation was provided and to ensure residents/responsible parties that refuse to sign the Nursing Home Transfer Discharge Notice for non-emergent situations are provided a full 30 day notice with an appropriate reason. Any concerns noted were immediately corrected. NHA/designee at orientation as a part of the systematic changes. (4) How the corrective action(s) will be monitored to ensure the practice will not recur, i.e., what quality assurance program will be put in place: The DON/Designee will audit 5 random discharged residents to ensure appropriate transportation was provided and to ensure residents/responsible parties that refuse to sign the Nursing Home Transfer Discharge Notice for non-emergent situations are provided a full 30 day notice with an appropriate reason. Any concerns noted were immediately corrected. The findings of these quality monitoring's to be reported to the Quality Assurance/Performance Improvement Committee monthly until committee determines substantial compliance has been met.
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.



