Failure to Ensure Safe, Appropriate, and Properly Noticed Discharges for Two Cognitively Intact Residents
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure safe and appropriate discharge planning and execution for two cognitively intact residents, resulting in unsafe and inappropriate transfers/discharges. For the first resident, who had diagnoses including pulmonary embolism with acute cor pulmonale, acute respiratory failure, type 2 diabetes, presence of a cardiac pacemaker, anxiety disorder, depression, unspecified affective mood disorder, and Parkinson’s disease without dyskinesia, the facility arranged 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 on the day of discharge, but the clinical record contained no documentation of the actual pickup time. The transport company later reported that the request was canceled the same day because their required advance notice had not been met. On the day of discharge, the resident was removed from her room and placed in the activities room to wait for transportation. Multiple staff interviews indicated that the resident remained in common areas (activities room, dining room, lobby, and at the nurse’s station) asking about her ride as the afternoon and evening progressed. The assistant director of nursing stated that when he left the facility early in the evening, the resident was still asking about her ride and was told that the ALF was coming to pick her up. He later received text messages from an RN that the resident was anxious and wanted to leave, followed by a message that the resident had left. The nursing home administrator stated that staff assumed the resident had left with her transportation, even though no one actually saw her get into a vehicle and there was no documentation of her departure. The resident later reported that she had been waiting for transportation for hours, that “the big wigs left and the night nurses did not know what to do with her,” and that she eventually pushed open the door and left the building in her wheelchair without staff awareness. She stated she did not know the route to her ALF, did not have her phone, hearing aids, or dentures, and was self-propelling her wheelchair in the road when a couple stopped to help and called 911. An emergency department physician note documented that the resident said she had been waiting all day, became tired of waiting, left, and was found on the side of the street in her wheelchair before being brought to the ER by EMS. The ALF administrator reported that she was informed by the nursing home that the ALF had not picked up the resident, and later learned from a hospital case manager that the resident had been found on the side of the road and transported to the hospital. For the second resident, who had diagnoses including intervertebral disc degeneration, type 2 diabetes, insomnia due to other mental disorder, and depressive episodes, the facility failed to provide appropriate notice and justification for transfer and did not ensure the resident was discharged to the chosen destination. A psychology note shortly before discharge documented that the resident was unstable and having episodes of agitation due to situational concerns about being transferred to a new nursing home the following week. The discharge summary indicated the resident was being discharged to another nursing home in a different county, 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 on the day of discharge stated that the reason for discharge was that the resident’s health had improved sufficiently so that he no longer needed the services provided by the facility, and documented that the resident refused to sign the notice. The resident later reported that he had been given three options of places to go and was told he would be evicted if he did not choose one, and that the facility told him they needed to free up his room because it was being converted to a different type of care. He stated that he chose a nursing home in one city but was instead transported to a nursing home in another city. The social services assistant stated that the resident chose the nursing home where he was sent, but also acknowledged that the resident was not given a 30‑day written notice of transfer and that there was no documentation of the verbal notice she said had been given three weeks earlier. She confirmed that the resident refused to sign the transfer form and that she was unsure why he was transferred. The nursing home administrator stated that the facility gives a 72‑hour notice if they cannot provide the skills or services to meet a resident’s maximum potential and that this resident was transferred because the facility was transitioning to more short‑term beds, and also acknowledged that the forms were not filled out correctly and there was no documentation that the resident agreed to transfer. The assistant director of nursing stated there was no medical reason for the transfer, the resident was not a danger to himself or others, still needed LTC, and that the receiving nursing home did not provide any additional care that their facility could not provide. The resident further reported that two days after arriving at the new nursing home he was hospitalized for medical complications, and that the new nursing home would not accept him back after his hospital stay. He stated that he then had to pay out of pocket for transportation back to his original city and was living in hotels because he had no home. Overall, the record review and interviews showed that the facility did not follow its own transfer and discharge policy requirements for notice, documentation of reasons for transfer, confirmation of transportation, and ensuring that discharges and transfers met residents’ needs and preferences and were carried out safely for both residents involved.
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