Failure to Provide Complete Clinical Information and AMA Documentation at Discharge
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure that a resident’s discharge summary contained an accurate and current description of clinical status and sufficiently detailed, individualized care instructions at the time of discharge against medical advice (AMA). The resident was an adult female admitted with active diagnoses including hypertension, wound infection, and risk of malnutrition, and her baseline care plan documented antibiotic therapy for a wound infection, pneumonia, and UTI, along with monitoring of vital signs, behavioral concerns (talking to herself, moderate elopement risk), and skin issues including a surgical wound and mild risk for pressure ulcers. The MDS reflected moderate cognitive impairment (BIMS score of 8) and a need for supervision with most ADLs. The baseline care plan noted an expectation for discharge to the community but did not include documented interventions related to that discharge. On the day of discharge, progress notes documented that the resident told the social worker she wanted to discharge to a community shelter and was informed that leaving at that time would be an AMA discharge and that medications could not be sent with her; the resident stated she understood and still wished to leave. A subsequent nursing note documented that the resident continued to refuse care, medications, and wound treatment, made arrangements to leave, and left the facility AMA with her belongings, with administration, DON, ADON, and the social worker aware. The physician discharge summary form listed the admission diagnosis of cellulitis of the right lower limb and essential hypertension, identified the discharge type as AMA, and noted that medications were locked in the med room and personal property was taken with the resident, but left the sections for condition upon discharge, prognosis, and discharge diagnosis blank. Further record review showed there was no documentation of special instructions or precautions for ongoing care or of risks associated with discharging AMA in the discharge summary. The electronic health record contained no completed AMA document signed by staff or the resident, despite the facility’s policy requiring AMA forms to be executed when a resident leaves without a physician’s order after being informed of risks and consequences. Interviews with the interim administrator, social worker, NP, and DON confirmed that the resident had been at the facility only a few days, was treated with antibiotics for a leg wound infection, refused care and medications, and chose to leave AMA, and that the social worker was not aware at the time that an AMA discharge form was required. The facility’s written Discharge/Transfer Policy required obtaining a discharge order, notifying the resident and family or representative, providing written discharge instructions/education, and, for AMA discharges, holding a care conference with the treating physician to explain risks and having the resident complete all required AMA forms, steps that were not documented as completed for this resident.
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.



