Failure to Accurately Document and Record Immediate Discharge After Behavioral Incident
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.
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