Resident Left Unattended in Non-Running Transport Van in Hot Weather
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to protect a resident from neglect during transportation, resulting in the resident being left unattended in a non-running facility transport van in hot weather. The facility’s own Abuse, Neglect, Exploitation, Misappropriation, Mistreatment, and Injury of Unknown Origin (ANEMMI) policy defined neglect as the failure to provide goods and services necessary to avoid physical harm, pain, mental anguish, or emotional distress. The facility’s transportation policy and Fleet Management Manual required that residents remain under continuous supervision during transport, prohibited leaving residents unattended in vehicles, and specified that facility-owned vehicles were to be used only for facility business. Despite these policies, the assigned CNA-driver left the resident alone in the van while he went into a dentist’s office for a personal appointment. The resident involved had been admitted in early March with diagnoses including surgical aftercare following digestive system surgery, chronic kidney disease, and adjustment disorder with mixed anxiety and depressed mood. A BIMS assessment showed intact cognition with a score of 13/15. The care plan identified the resident as being at risk for fluid imbalance related to diuretic use and colostomy, with a goal to remain free from symptoms of dehydration. The resident required maximum assistance of one person for transfers and, according to the ADON and Director of Rehab, was non-ambulatory and always seen in a wheelchair, unable to walk or get out of the wheelchair independently. On the day of the incident, the resident had been seen by urology and was directed to go to the ER due to abnormal labs and concern for a possible fistula, and she had a nephrostomy tube with multiple tubes in place. Instead of proceeding directly to the ER, the CNA-driver diverted to a shopping center where his dentist’s office was located. He parked the facility van in an unshaded area, left the engine off, and left the resident strapped in her wheelchair in the back of the van. The resident reported that all doors and windows were shut and that it became very hot inside the van. The CNA later acknowledged in an interview that he left the resident unattended and strapped in the wheelchair, stating he had a bleeding mouth and stopped for an appointment, and that the window was only “a little open.” A police report documented that officers were dispatched after the resident called 911 stating she was locked in the bus and it was getting warm inside. When police and the Fire Department arrived, the van was not running, only the driver’s window was down and the front passenger door was slightly ajar, the vehicle was not in a shaded area, and the outside temperature was approximately 83°F and felt much warmer inside the van. The resident was visibly sweating, and the Fire Department had difficulty opening the doors, ultimately removing her through the front door. The police report recorded an offense code for crimes against person–neglect of an elderly disabled adult without great harm. The resident later described feeling trapped, becoming very hot, and believing she could have died if not rescued, and her son reported that she became emotional and cried when recounting the incident. The Emergency Department physician note documented that the patient was an elderly female who had been told by urology to go to the ER due to abnormal labs and that she reported feeling weak, with the note explicitly stating that she had been left in the van by the driver. A late-entry nursing progress note from the facility recorded that while being transported to the hospital following her appointment, the resident was left temporarily unattended and called 911, and that she had no signs of distress and was evaluated out of an abundance of caution. The CDC heat health information cited in the investigation noted that even in cool temperatures, cars can heat to dangerous levels quickly and that older adults are more prone to heat-related health problems. Based on these facts, surveyors determined that the facility failed to protect the resident’s right to be free from neglect by not preventing her from being left unattended in a hot, non-running vehicle, leading to an Immediate Jeopardy determination.
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.



