DES MOINES, Iowa — An Iowa care home is being fined $10,000 after declaring one of its residents dead and transferring her to a funeral home – where she was found to still be alive.

A report from the Iowa Department of Inspection and Appeals says the mistaken death declaration occurred on Jan. 3 after a staff member at the Glen Oaks Alzheimer’s Special Care Center in Urbandale reported that the woman, 66, had died about 6 a.m. The report said the woman, who had early onset dementia, anxiety and depression, had been in hospice care since Dec. 28.

The staff member reported she could no longer feel the woman’s pulse and alerted a nurse practitioner, who made the death declaration, the report said. Iowa law allows nurses and physicians’ assistants, in addition to doctors, to declare a patient dead.

The report also said that the woman previously had suffered minor seizures and showed signs of mottled skin, a sign of approaching death.

‘Gasped for air’

About 90 minutes after the woman was declared dead, she was taken to the Ankeny Funeral Home & Crematory in a zipped body bag, the report said. When she arrived, funeral home staff unzipped the bag and saw that her chest was moving as she “gasped for air.” Staff then called 911. 

The Ankeny Fire Department responded to the call, which it said reported a person in apparent cardiac arrest. That proved incorrect, the department said, and the woman was taken to a hospital, where she was found to be breathing, though unresponsive.

More: 60-year-old dies after spectator fight at Vermont middle school basketball game; cause of death pending