Late discharge notice and incomplete personal effects inventory
Summary
The facility failed to provide a timely written Notice of Proposed Transfer/Discharge for a resident who was cognitively intact and had capacity to understand and make decisions. The resident’s record showed a BIMS score of 14, and the interdisciplinary team discussed discharge planning with the resident and his son. A NOMNC was issued, but the Notice of Proposed Transfer/Discharge was completed after the resident had already been discharged home and was mailed to the resident’s family member rather than being provided before discharge. The facility’s policy required written notice of a proposed transfer/discharge at least 48 hours before the effective date, unless it was an emergency transfer, and the notice was to include the reason, effective date, location, and appeal rights information, including contact information for the Long-Term Ombudsman and Disability Rights California. The facility also failed to complete the inventory of personal effects for a resident who was transferred to a general acute care hospital due to chest pain. The resident had diagnoses including pneumonia, pulmonary fibrosis, and sepsis. The Inventory of Personal Effects form was dated before the transfer, but the discharge portion was not signed by the resident or the resident’s representative after the transfer to the hospital. There was no documented evidence that the resident’s personal belongings were turned over to the resident representative upon transfer or after the resident was later discharged from the facility following a prolonged hospital stay beyond seven days. During interview, Social Services staff stated that nurses usually had the resident or representative sign out belongings upon transfer or discharge, but on weekends housekeeping kept a list of belongings turned over to the representative. The Social Services Assistant stated she would follow up with housekeeping to obtain that list, and the Administrator stated staff were still trying to locate it. The facility policy required the resident or responsible party to date and sign the discharge section of the inventory form with a staff nurse to certify receipt of personal effects, and a photocopy of the completed original form to be given to the resident or responsible party.
Penalty
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