Failure to Timely Report Alleged Misappropriation and Theft of Resident Property
Summary
The facility failed to ensure that all alleged violations involving abuse, neglect, exploitation, misappropriation, or mistreatment, including injuries of unknown source, were reported within required timeframes to the administrator and appropriate state officials. For one resident, an unauthorized use of a credit card by a staff member for a personal purchase was not identified or treated by the administrator as an alleged violation of misappropriation of funds, despite being brought forward through the grievance process. For a second resident, an allegation of missing money from a locked drawer was not reported by the social worker to the administrator as an alleged theft or misappropriation, and the administrator did not report the allegation to the State Survey Agency within 24 hours as required. Resident #1 was an older female with type 2 diabetes mellitus, unspecified dementia, and a cognitive communication deficit, but with a BIMS score of 14 indicating intact cognition and no documented memory concerns. She was dependent on staff for toileting hygiene but independent in other ADLs. She was sent to the ER on 02/28/2026 and admitted with Flu A, returning to the facility on 03/02/2026. On 03/06/2026, she submitted a grievance stating that her daughter had informed her that her credit card had been charged for $152 at a grocery store curbside service, and that she had not made a purchase that day. The grievance was received by the Social Services Director. Subsequent documentation showed that the Health Information Manager admitted using the resident’s credit card "in error" for a personal curbside order because the resident’s card information had been stored in the staff member’s personal phone wallet from prior food orders placed for the resident. The Health Information Manager’s written statement confirmed that the resident’s credit card had been used on 02/28/2026 for a personal grocery order while the resident was in the hospital, and that the staff member contacted the responsible party and arranged reimbursement. The DON acknowledged being notified of the grievance and that the staff member had used the resident’s credit card without authorization, and also acknowledged that the incident was not reported to the State, though she stated it perhaps should have been. The administrator stated she was aware of the grievance, reviewed it, and knew that the staff member had used the resident’s credit card stored on a personal cell phone for a personal purchase, but she did not consider it an alleged violation requiring reporting because she believed it was unintentional and did not rise to that level. No employee coaching record related to this incident was provided upon request. Resident #2 was an older male with atherosclerotic heart disease, a history of transient ischemic attack, and seizures, with a BIMS score of 13 indicating intact cognition and no documented memory concerns, and was independent in self-care and mobility. He submitted a grievance reporting that $57 was missing from a locked drawer in his room, stating that he remembered the drawer being locked and that the key was kept in another, unlocked drawer with his socks where it was visible. The social worker documented examining the drawer, finding it intact and not openable without a key, and confirmed that no money was found. The resident was educated on key use, his right to keep the key on his person, to maintain a spending log, and his right to file a police report, which he declined at that time. The administrator later acknowledged being aware of this grievance of missing money but stated that it was not brought to her as an allegation of theft and that she did not view it as a specific allegation requiring reporting to the State Agency. She described that many male residents loan money to others and was unsure whether the missing money grievance was confirmed. The DON reported she had not been notified of this grievance and would need to follow up with the social worker. Facility policies on abuse, misappropriation, and grievances stated that all alleged or suspected violations, including theft or misappropriation of resident property, must be promptly reported to community management and appropriate state agencies, and that residents have the right to be free from abuse and exploitation and to keep personal property secure from theft or loss. Despite these policies, the allegations involving unauthorized use of a resident’s credit card and missing resident funds were not treated and reported as required alleged violations. The facility’s written guidance defined misappropriation of resident property as the deliberate misplacement, exploitation, or wrongful use of a resident’s belongings or money without consent, and defined an alleged violation as any observed or reported situation that, if verified, could be noncompliance with federal requirements related to mistreatment, exploitation, neglect, abuse, or misappropriation. The same guidance required that all alleged or suspected violations and all substantiated incidents of abuse be promptly reported to appropriate state agencies. Nonetheless, the administrator and social worker did not report the two residents’ allegations of unauthorized credit card use and missing money to the State Survey Agency within the required timeframes, resulting in the cited deficiency for failure to timely report suspected abuse, neglect, exploitation, or misappropriation.
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