Failure to Timely Report and Investigate Alleged Neglect and Abuse
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure that all alleged violations involving abuse or neglect were immediately reported to the Administrator and the State Agency, and that an allegation of neglect was properly documented and investigated. One resident, who is cognitively intact and frequently incontinent of urine, reported that on a day in January or February an unidentified CNA refused to provide incontinence care for an entire day shift despite multiple requests. The resident stated that she typically has her incontinence brief changed after breakfast and again early afternoon, but on this day the CNA did not change her after breakfast, ignored her request at lunch, and left the room without speaking. The resident reported feeling like “garbage” and “useless,” was cold because her brief and bed sheets were soaked with urine, and described being “wet and dirty and itchy where a lady shouldn’t be itchy.” She told the surveyor that she considered this incident to be severe physical abuse, and her description met the facility’s own policy definition of neglect as failure to provide necessary goods and services to avoid physical harm, pain, mental anguish, or emotional distress. According to interviews, the second-shift CNA who came on duty that afternoon found the resident’s bed linens and incontinence brief soaked with urine, cleaned and changed the resident, and reported the situation to the ADON and a social worker. The ADON recalled that the resident was crying, needed consoling, and that a grievance was initiated and given to the social workers. The resident also reported that she spoke with both the ADON and a social worker about the incident and that she did not see the involved CNA again. However, there were no progress notes documenting the incident, no self-report to the State Agency, and no entry for this event on the grievance log initially provided to surveyors. When first interviewed, the social worker named by the resident and staff stated that nothing about such an incident “was jumping” into her head, that she did not remember anything, and that she could not find any related grievance in the last several months. Additional documentation later produced by the facility included a handwritten grievance form dated the day after the incident, completed by the same social worker who initially denied recollection. This grievance recorded that the resident had asked the CNA to be changed after breakfast, was told the CNA would return, and later put on her call light after 1 p.m. when she still had not been toileted or changed. Another CNA answered the light, said she would get the assigned CNA, and the resident reported that the assigned CNA turned the call light off without providing care. The grievance documented that the second-shift CNA eventually answered the call light, found the resident unchanged from first shift, and then changed the resident’s sheets, assisted her to the commode, and cleaned and changed her clothing. The grievance form contained no documentation of investigation, follow-up, or resolution, and it had not been included on the grievance log given to surveyors. The Administrator stated that staff are expected to notify the Administrator immediately of any allegation of abuse or neglect and confirmed that the described conduct would be considered an allegation of abuse or neglect, yet the Administrator was unaware of this allegation and it was never reported to the State Agency. A second resident also reported an allegation of abuse that was not immediately reported to the Administrator or the State Agency, further demonstrating that not all alleged violations were reported as required by facility policy and regulation. The facility’s own abuse, neglect, and exploitation policy required immediate investigation when suspicion or reports of abuse or neglect occur, written procedures for reporting all alleged violations to the Administrator and State Agency within specified timeframes, and documentation of analysis and follow-up actions. Staff interviews showed inconsistent understanding of reporting expectations: one of three interviewed staff stated they would report an allegation directly to the Administrator, while others indicated they would only inform a nurse or unit manager. Despite multiple staff members (the second-shift CNA, the ADON, and at least one social worker) being aware of the resident’s allegation that her basic toileting and incontinence care needs were refused for an entire shift, the allegation was not promptly brought to the Administrator’s attention, was not self-reported to the State Agency, and was not properly logged and investigated through the facility’s grievance process. These actions and inactions led to the cited deficiency for failure to timely report and investigate alleged abuse/neglect and to report results to proper authorities for the residents involved.
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.



