Skip to main content
Advertisement

Forest Hill Manor: Dementia Patient Missing 18 Hours - CA

The 65-year-old resident disappeared on June 27, 2025, sometime before 5 p.m. Staff didn't discover she was gone until the next morning. But the certified nursing assistant continued filling out her fall monitoring log through 11 p.m. that night, documenting checks that never happened.

Forest Hill Manor Health Center facility inspection

When inspectors confronted him about the false entries on September 18, the assistant admitted his mistake. "Resident 1 was missing and he made a mistake in documentation in the fall monitoring log," according to the federal inspection report.

Advertisement

The resident spent the night outdoors. A citizen found her the following afternoon around 3:44 p.m., nearly 19 hours after she vanished. Police noted she "was not in a clear state of mind" and was "talking and pointing about a dog but there was no dog in sight."

Emergency room doctors at the local hospital documented extensive injuries from her night outside. She had "multiple bodily scratches/abrasions including a gaping scalp wound requiring repair." Medical staff started a warming device to treat "significant hypothermia" and diagnosed her with rhabdomyolysis — a dangerous condition where muscle tissue breaks down and releases damaging proteins into the bloodstream.

The hospital record noted she had "likely" been outside all night.

Forest Hill Manor had no technological safeguards to prevent such escapes. The facility lacked both a wander guard system — which uses bracelets and door sensors to alert staff when residents approach exits — and any alarm system, the director of nursing confirmed during interviews with inspectors.

The resident's family had hired a private sitter just three weeks earlier, paying for 12-hour shifts from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. starting June 6. But the facility's social services director convinced a family member to discontinue the service after just four days.

During a June 10 discussion, the social services director told the family "the resident did not need a sitter," according to inspection records.

Seventeen days later, the resident was gone.

The California Highway Patrol activated a Silver Alert within a three-mile radius when police realized an at-risk senior had disappeared. The Pacific Grove Police Department posted missing person flyers on social media and organized volunteer search teams to comb the area systematically.

The monitoring failures extended beyond the night she disappeared. Inspection records show gaps in documentation for multiple shifts: no entries for June 18 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. or 4 p.m. to 11 p.m., June 19-20 from 4 p.m. to 11 p.m., June 21 from 7 a.m. to 11 p.m., June 23 from midnight to 7 a.m., and June 24-26 from various afternoon and evening hours.

The director of nursing acknowledged during a September 3 interview that "the monitoring entries were not complete."

Forest Hill Manor's own policies appeared inadequate for preventing such incidents. The facility's wandering and elopement policy, last revised in March 2019, "did not address preventative measures to prevent elopement," inspectors found.

When questioned about this gap, the director of nursing insisted the policy did address preventative measures, contradicting what inspectors had documented.

The resident's medical complications from her overnight exposure were severe. Beyond hypothermia and the head laceration requiring surgical repair, doctors diagnosed altered mental status and a urinary tract infection. The rhabdomyolysis condition can cause kidney failure and other life-threatening complications.

Federal inspectors classified the violation as causing "actual harm" to residents, finding that Forest Hill Manor failed to provide adequate supervision and assistance devices to prevent accidents for residents who required such interventions.

The case highlights how documentation fraud can mask serious safety failures in nursing homes. While the missing resident faced life-threatening exposure to Pacific Grove's overnight elements, staff continued creating false records suggesting normal care was being provided.

The resident was found talking incoherently about a nonexistent dog, nearly 20 hours after she had walked out of a facility that was supposed to be monitoring her every few hours.

Full Inspection Report

The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Forest Hill Manor Health Center from 2025-10-01 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.

Additional Resources

🏥 Editorial Standards & Professional Oversight

Data Source: This report is based on official federal inspection data from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS).

Editorial Process: Content generated using AI (Claude) to synthesize complex regulatory data, then reviewed and verified for accuracy by our editorial team.

Professional Review: All content undergoes standards and compliance oversight by Christopher F. Nesbitt, Sr., NH EMT & BU-trained Paralegal, using professional regulatory data auditing protocols.

Medical Perspective: As emergency medical professionals, we understand how nursing home violations can escalate to health emergencies requiring ambulance transport. This analysis contextualizes regulatory findings within real-world patient safety implications.

Last verified: May 6, 2026 | Learn more about our methodology

📋 Quick Answer

FOREST HILL MANOR HEALTH CENTER in PACIFIC GROVE, CA was cited for violations during a health inspection on October 1, 2025.

The 65-year-old resident disappeared on June 27, 2025, sometime before 5 p.m.

What this means: Health inspections identify deficiencies that facilities must correct. Violations range from minor documentation issues to serious safety concerns. Review the full report below for specific details and facility response.

Frequently Asked Questions

What happened at FOREST HILL MANOR HEALTH CENTER?
The 65-year-old resident disappeared on June 27, 2025, sometime before 5 p.m.
How serious are these violations?
Violation severity varies from minor documentation issues to serious safety concerns. Review the inspection report for specific deficiency codes and scope. All violations must be corrected within required timeframes and are subject to follow-up verification inspections.
What should families do?
Families should: (1) Ask facility administration about specific corrective actions taken, (2) Request to see the follow-up inspection report verifying corrections, (3) Check if this represents a pattern by reviewing prior inspection reports, (4) Compare this facility's ratings with other nursing homes in PACIFIC GROVE, CA, (5) Report any new concerns directly to state authorities.
Where can I see the full inspection report?
The complete inspection report is available on Medicare.gov's Care Compare website (www.medicare.gov/care-compare). You can also request a copy directly from FOREST HILL MANOR HEALTH CENTER or from the state Department of Health. The report includes specific deficiency codes, facility responses, and correction timelines. This facility's federal provider number is 555867.
Has this facility had violations before?
To check FOREST HILL MANOR HEALTH CENTER's history, visit Medicare.gov's Care Compare and review their inspection history, quality ratings, and staffing levels. Look for patterns of repeated violations, especially in critical areas like abuse prevention, medication management, infection control, and resident safety.