Failure to Investigate Alleged Misappropriation of Resident Property
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to investigate and respond appropriately to allegations of misappropriation of personal property for two residents. For the first resident, who was admitted under hospice for comfort-focused treatment, ambulance transport documentation showed she arrived with a bag of supplies, a cell phone, a wheelchair, and a backpack, while the facility’s admission inventory documented no belongings and indicated she was given donated clothes. The resident’s responsible party reported to the Administrator that the resident’s cell phone, driver’s license, and debit card were missing, and also reported abnormal financial activity, including the resident withdrawing $1,200 to give to a CNA to purchase an airline ticket to Zimbabwe, long-distance calls made from the resident’s cell phone after her death, and withdrawals from her debit card after death. The responsible party stated she shared all this information with the Administrator and requested help in investigating and retrieving the missing items, but the facility had not taken responsibility for safeguarding the resident’s belongings. During interview, the Administrator acknowledged awareness of the responsible party’s concerns and confirmed he looked into the issue of the resident transferring money to a CNA for an airline ticket, which he recognized as a highly unusual interaction between staff and resident. He stated he determined the money was refunded when the resident did not take the trip and took no further action because there was nothing in the facility’s handbook or policy specifically prohibiting this type of interaction. The Administrator did not comment when presented with ambulance documentation showing the resident arrived with belongings that were not reflected on the admission inventory. He also stated he did not suspend the CNA, did not report the allegation to appropriate agencies, did not expand the investigation to other residents under the CNA’s care, and did not formally document the allegations or his investigation beyond some emails, despite facility policy requiring investigation of incidents of theft or misappropriation. For the second resident, who had a BIMs score of 5/15 indicating severe memory and thinking problems, the hospital discharge record documented that she was to be discharged with $3,600 in U.S. currency, a yellow necklace and bracelet, and two pendants, and that the hospital social worker had discussed these valuables with facility admission staff, who agreed to document and secure them. The facility social worker reported she became aware of missing money and jewelry when informed by the resident’s family member and concluded the facility was not responsible because the resident allegedly arrived without belongings. She interviewed the admission staff, who did not recall the phone conversation or discussion of valuables, and relied heavily on the resident’s statement, translated by the ombudsman, that she gave her money and jewelry to a Vietnamese man on arrival, despite the facility having no Vietnamese male staff at that time and the resident’s documented severe cognitive impairment. There was no evidence the facility contacted the transport company to verify what items accompanied the resident, no documented follow-up when the resident arrived without the valuables the hospital had reported, and no expansion of the investigation to review other residents’ belongings associated with the admission staff involved, contrary to the facility’s written policy on investigating theft and misappropriation.
Penalty
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