F0627 F627: Ensure the transfer/discharge meets the resident's needs/preferences and that the resident is prepared for a safe transfer/discharge.
D

Failure to Accurately Document and Record Immediate Discharge After Behavioral Incident

Continuing Healthcare Of Cuyahoga FallsCuyahoga Falls, Ohio Survey Completed on 04-10-2026

Summary

The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure that an immediate discharge was accurately documented and included in the medical record for a resident with severe cognitive impairment and significant behavioral symptoms. The resident had vascular dementia, major depressive disorder, alcohol dependence with alcohol-induced persisting dementia, anxiety disorders, and generalized anxiety disorder, and required maximum assistance for most personal care. Physician orders included multiple psychotropic and mood-stabilizing medications, and an order for the resident to reside on a secured unit. The quarterly MDS documented severe cognitive impairment, hallucinations, delusions, physical behaviors toward others, other behavioral symptoms, rejection of care, and wandering. From admission through discharge, nursing progress notes described escalating agitation and disruptive behaviors, including wandering into other residents’ rooms, placing items in toilets, exit-seeking, refusal of medications, and increasing aggression when redirected. The resident engaged in repeated episodes of public disrobing, inappropriate urination and defecation, and sexually inappropriate behaviors, such as entering female residents’ rooms naked and engaging in inappropriate sexual behavior on their beds, and attempting to rub feces on other residents. The resident was transferred twice for psychiatric evaluation due to behaviors the facility was unable to manage, including anxiety, aggression, exit seeking, sexual aggression toward females, and combative behavior resulting in self-inflicted injury. Despite these events, no interdisciplinary team notes discussing the resident’s behaviors were found in the record during the resident’s stay. On one evening, an LPN documented that the resident was in the hallway with genitals exposed, refused redirection to dress, became physically aggressive, and ripped the LPN’s shirt and pulled out her hair. The resident then entered a female resident’s room naked, claimed she was his wife, and forcefully attempted to get into her bed, causing the female resident to fall out of bed while trying to get away. Emergency services were contacted, and both residents were transferred to the ER for evaluation. After this event, there was no further documentation in the nursing progress notes regarding the resident’s discharge disposition. The Administrator later stated that an emergency discharge was issued due to the resident’s behaviors endangering others, but review of the electronic health record revealed no documentation of the immediate discharge, no record that the resident’s wife had been informed of the discharge and its reasons, and no scanned copy of the discharge notice. Further review showed that a written discharge notice, dated two days after the incident, inaccurately listed the discharge location as the family home, even though the resident had been transported to the hospital and did not return to the facility. The notice stated that the discharge was immediate due to behaviors endangering the safety of individuals in the home and included information on appeal rights and contact information for the Ombudsman and Administrator. The Administrator produced a separate folder containing a copy of the certified mail to the resident’s wife, an undated and unsigned note about a voicemail to the receiving facility’s social worker stating the resident could not return, and a narrative that the wife was notified of the emergent discharge and believed he would do better on an all-male secured unit. However, the Administrator confirmed that this information and the discharge notice had not been documented or scanned into the resident’s electronic health record, contrary to the facility’s Discharge/Transfer policy, which requires that unplanned discharge information and rationale be documented in the electronic record. The facility’s Discharge/Transfer policy, last revised in June 2025, outlined acceptable rationales for discharge or transfer, including behavioral issues that cannot be safely managed and that endanger others, and required that when unplanned discharges occur, the facility provide specific information in the discharge notice explaining why the resident is being discharged and how the discharge meets criteria, with this information documented in the resident’s electronic health record. In this case, the surveyors found that the facility failed to ensure the immediate discharge was accurately documented in the medical record and that the discharge notice contained accurate information about the discharge location, resulting in a deficiency for failure to ensure the transfer/discharge process met requirements for documentation and accuracy for this resident.

Penalty

No penalty information released
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The penalty, as released by CMS, applies to the entire inspection this citation is part of, covering all citations and f-tags issued, not just this specific f-tag. For the complete original report, please refer to the 'Details' section.

Resources

Below are regulatory guidelines relevant to this citation:

See other F0627 citations
Failure to Permit Resident’s Return and Inadequate Discharge/Bed-Hold Process After Psychiatric Evaluation
D
F0627 F627: Ensure the transfer/discharge meets the resident's needs/preferences and that the resident is prepared for a safe transfer/discharge.
Short Summary

A resident with cognitive and mental health diagnoses, who had previously expressed a desire to remain in LTC, exhibited an episode of aggressive behavior that led to an involuntary emergency mental health examination and transfer to a hospital. The facility’s documentation shows the DON and provider described the behavior as dangerous and initiated the transfer, but the clinical record lacked evidence that a bed-hold policy was offered at the time of transfer. Hospital records indicated the resident was calm, oriented, medically cleared, and did not meet criteria for continued involuntary psychiatric placement, and he was deemed ready for discharge. When the hospital sought to return the resident, the DON, Administrator, and Admissions Director reported that facility leadership and regional management decided not to accept him back or to any sister facilities, without documented basis for discharge, resulting in his placement at another nursing home approximately 73 miles from his family.

No penalty information released
tooltip icon
The penalty, as released by CMS, applies to the entire inspection this citation is part of, covering all citations and f-tags issued, not just this specific f-tag. For the complete original report, please refer to the 'Details' section.
Unsafe discharge without needed supports
J
F0627 F627: Ensure the transfer/discharge meets the resident's needs/preferences and that the resident is prepared for a safe transfer/discharge.
Short Summary

A resident with CHF, COPD, morbid obesity, chronic wounds, and total bowel/bladder incontinence was discharged home by stretcher despite being a mechanical-lift resident who could not walk or toilet independently. Home health was not in place, the family reported difficulty reaching SW, and the resident was discharged without an AMA notice or Ombudsman notice. She soiled herself at home, could not clean up, and was hospitalized shortly after for CHF exacerbation and fluid overload.

Fine: $27,378
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The penalty, as released by CMS, applies to the entire inspection this citation is part of, covering all citations and f-tags issued, not just this specific f-tag. For the complete original report, please refer to the 'Details' section.
Discharge planning did not reflect resident’s expressed home discharge preference
D
F0627 F627: Ensure the transfer/discharge meets the resident's needs/preferences and that the resident is prepared for a safe transfer/discharge.
Short Summary

A resident with dementia, TBI, and prior severe cognitive impairment later became able to clearly express that she wanted to go home with Family Member D, but the care plan did not show updated discharge goals once she stabilized. Staff across nursing, Social Services, Activities, and administration knew she repeatedly voiced this preference, yet the chart did not show action to support her discharge wishes. The record also showed confusion about an MPOA that was not signed by the resident and no physician certification that she lacked competence to make her own health care decisions.

No penalty information released
tooltip icon
The penalty, as released by CMS, applies to the entire inspection this citation is part of, covering all citations and f-tags issued, not just this specific f-tag. For the complete original report, please refer to the 'Details' section.
Failure to Allow Return After Hospital Transfer
D
F0627 F627: Ensure the transfer/discharge meets the resident's needs/preferences and that the resident is prepared for a safe transfer/discharge.
Short Summary

Failure to Allow Return After Hospital Transfer: A resident was transferred to the ER for altered mental status and increased confusion, but the facility did not provide a transfer/discharge notice and did not allow the resident to return after the acute hospitalization. The DON stated the decision not to permit return was financial, while the business office manager believed it was due to insufficient staffing. The facility policy stated residents transferred to acute care will be permitted to return upon discharge, and not permitting return constitutes a discharge.

No penalty information released
tooltip icon
The penalty, as released by CMS, applies to the entire inspection this citation is part of, covering all citations and f-tags issued, not just this specific f-tag. For the complete original report, please refer to the 'Details' section.
Failure to Ensure Safe and Properly Planned Discharges for Two Cognitively Intact Residents
G
F0627 F627: Ensure the transfer/discharge meets the resident's needs/preferences and that the resident is prepared for a safe transfer/discharge.
Short Summary

Two residents experienced inappropriate and poorly managed discharges. One resident with acute PE, acute respiratory failure, DM2, affective disorder, and Parkinson’s disease was discharged to an ALF with transportation arranged through an outside company, but the transport request was later canceled and not confirmed by staff. After being moved from her room to an activities area and repeatedly told her ride was coming, she left the building in her wheelchair without staff awareness and was later found on the roadside and taken to the ED. Another resident with degenerative disc disease, DM2 due to other mental disorder, and adjustment disorder was transferred to another nursing home without a documented medical reason, without a 30‑day written notice, and with a discharge order lacking reason, level of care, or assistance needs. He reported being told he would be evicted if he did not choose a facility, refused to sign the transfer notice, and ultimately was sent to a different nursing home than the one he chose, later having to arrange and pay for his own transportation after the receiving facility would not take him back.

No penalty information released
tooltip icon
The penalty, as released by CMS, applies to the entire inspection this citation is part of, covering all citations and f-tags issued, not just this specific f-tag. For the complete original report, please refer to the 'Details' section.
Discharge Process Failed to Provide Reconciled Medications and Paperwork
D
F0627 F627: Ensure the transfer/discharge meets the resident's needs/preferences and that the resident is prepared for a safe transfer/discharge.
Short Summary

A resident with polyneuropathy, DM2, UTI, and HTN was discharged without a reconciled med list, discharge paperwork, or her prescribed meds, including pain meds. The discharge summary had no current meds listed, the signed discharge instruction form was not found in the chart, and the resident reported she went overnight without meds until the discharge planner delivered them the next morning. Staff accounts conflicted about whether discharge instructions and meds were reviewed and provided.

No penalty information released
tooltip icon
The penalty, as released by CMS, applies to the entire inspection this citation is part of, covering all citations and f-tags issued, not just this specific f-tag. For the complete original report, please refer to the 'Details' section.

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