Improper Charging of Resident Trust Funds for Medi-Cal-Covered Room and Board
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to protect residents’ personal funds from being charged for services covered by Medi-Cal. For four residents whose records were reviewed, the facility debited their trust accounts for private room and board charges for a month in which they had documented Medi-Cal coverage. Facility business records, including the Trust - Transaction History and Activity Reports, showed that each of these residents’ trust accounts was debited $16,197.50 for private room and board for the same month. Eligibility Response documents dated at the beginning of that month indicated that each of these residents had Medi-Cal covered benefits for that period. Resident 7 was re-admitted with diagnoses including dementia, schizophrenia, and bipolar disorder, and had a BIMS score indicating severe cognitive impairment. Despite an Eligibility Response showing Medi-Cal coverage for the month in question, the Payer Setup Information showed that this resident was billed as private pay, and the trust account was debited $16,197.50 for private room and board. Resident 10, admitted with dementia and a psychotic disorder and documented to have fluctuating capacity but a BIMS score indicating cognitive intactness, similarly had Medi-Cal coverage per the Eligibility Response, yet the Payer Setup Information listed private pay status and the trust account was debited the same amount for private room and board. Resident 11, re-admitted with metabolic encephalopathy and dementia and documented as having capacity to make decisions, also had a Trust - Transaction History showing a $16,197.50 debit for private room and board for the month, while an Eligibility Response confirmed Medi-Cal coverage for that same period. Resident 12, re-admitted with metabolic encephalopathy, dementia, and altered mental status, had severe cognitive impairment per BIMS and a daughter listed as the responsible party. This resident’s Trust - Transaction History and Care Activity Report showed a $16,197.50 debit for private room and board for the month, despite an Eligibility Response confirming Medi-Cal benefits and Payer Setup Information indicating the resident was billed as private pay. In interviews, the Business Office Manager explained that the facility’s process is to recommend residents enroll in Medi-Cal as secondary insurance to avoid private pay charges when Medicare coverage ends, and stated that residents are only transferred to private pay when they do not have secondary insurance. The Business Office Manager acknowledged that on the first day of the month in question, each of the four residents was switched from Medi-Cal to private pay despite documented evidence of billable Medi-Cal benefits for that month, and that their trust accounts should not have been charged $16,197.50 for private room and board. The Administrator similarly stated that residents are not supposed to be charged for Medi-Cal covered benefits and confirmed that these four residents should not have been switched to private pay to cover services that Medi-Cal would have covered. The facility’s standard admission agreement also stated that no Medi-Cal-participating facility may require any resident to remain in private pay status before converting to Medi-Cal coverage, and requested Medi-Cal billing policies were not provided.
Penalty
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