Keizer Nursing And Rehabilitation
Inspection history, citations, penalties and survey trends for this long-term care facility in Keizer, Oregon.
- Location
- 4062 Arleta Avenue Ne, Keizer, Oregon 97303
- CMS Provider Number
- 385241
- Inspections on file
- 20
- Latest survey
- December 17, 2025
- Citations (last 12 mo.)
- 3
Citation history
Health deficiencies cited at Keizer Nursing And Rehabilitation during CMS and state inspections, most recent first.
Staff were observed handling unclean meal tickets and then, without changing gloves or performing hand hygiene, touching food and clean items such as bread rolls, plates, silverware, desserts, and condiments during meal service. Facility staff acknowledged that this practice did not meet sanitary standards.
Surveyors found that a refrigerator used for resident food storage contained outdated and unlabeled food items, including containers with old dates, take-out food, and opened ice cream with no open date. Some items were not marked with resident room numbers. The Dietary Manager stated monitoring had not been done recently, and facility policy required timely removal and proper labeling of food.
A resident with spinal stenosis and pain did not receive prescribed tizanidine as ordered because the medication was not reordered in a timely manner, resulting in missed doses and increased pain. Staff interviews and records confirmed ongoing issues with timely medication reordering, unclear responsibility among nursing staff, and that the pharmacy was not contacted for a refill until after the medication had run out.
Staff did not notify the physician about significant weight increases for a resident with chronic heart failure, hypertension, and a pacemaker, despite physician orders to do so. Documentation showed multiple instances of weight gain above the specified threshold without evidence of physician notification. An LPN could not recall making or documenting the notification, and facility leadership confirmed that staff were expected to follow the order.
A resident with diabetes and kidney failure sustained a fall during physical therapy, resulting in multiple right leg fractures confirmed by hospital evaluation. Despite the severity of the injury, facility staff did not submit a required incident report to the state agency within 24 hours, based on a misinterpretation of reporting requirements.
A resident with diabetes, decreased mobility, and cognitive deficits did not receive required nail care, as evidenced by long, jagged fingernails and lack of documentation in the clinical record. Staff confirmed the absence of nail care and documentation, despite facility expectations for nurses to provide and record this care for diabetic residents.
A resident with PTSD, anxiety, and a history of trauma did not receive trauma-informed care. Required assessments and documentation were incomplete, and the care plan lacked identification of trauma triggers or person-centered interventions. Staff reported the resident frequently referenced past traumas and exhibited distress, but the care plan and psychosocial evaluation did not address these needs.
Expired medications, including nutritional supplements, aspirin, and bisacodyl suppositories, were found in the medication storage room and on a medication cart. Staff confirmed that expired medications were expected to be removed and destroyed, but these items remained accessible during the survey.
Unsanitary Food Handling During Meal Service
Penalty
Summary
Staff in the facility's kitchen failed to maintain sanitary practices during meal preparation and service. Specifically, a cook and a dietary aide were observed handling resident-completed meal tickets with gloved hands and then, without changing gloves or performing hand hygiene, directly touching bread rolls, plates, silverware, desserts, and condiments that were served to residents. This practice was repeated throughout the meal service. Staff members, including the dietary manager and administrator, acknowledged that the meal tickets were considered unclean surfaces and that food and clean items should not be handled after touching them.
Outdated and Unlabeled Food Items Found in Resident Refrigerator
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to ensure that the resident food refrigerator was free of outdated food items. During an observation, the refrigerator contained food containers with dates from over a month prior, take-out food with similarly old dates, and a jar of soup with no date. The freezer section also had two opened and partially used ice cream containers with no open date. Some food containers did not have resident room numbers identified. The Dietary Manager acknowledged responsibility for monitoring the refrigerator but admitted it had not been done recently. Facility policy required foods to be removed after three days unless unopened and unexpired, and all items should be marked with resident room numbers. The Director of Nursing Services confirmed that staff should be marking foods with the room number of the resident.
Failure to Timely Reorder and Administer Physician-Ordered Medication
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to follow physician orders for medication administration for one resident with diagnoses including spinal stenosis and pain. The resident had physician orders for tizanidine HCl 2 mg tablets to be administered three times daily and as needed for muscle spasms, as well as oxycodone for pain. Documentation showed that the resident's tizanidine was not administered as ordered because the medication was not available; progress notes indicated the facility was out of the medication, and the pharmacy was not contacted for a refill until after the resident had already missed doses. The Medication Administration Record (MAR) and staff interviews confirmed that the resident experienced increased pain and breakthrough pain due to the unavailability of the muscle relaxant. Staff interviews revealed that nurses, including agency staff, were responsible for reordering medications but did not consistently do so in a timely manner. There was a lack of clarity among staff regarding who was responsible for monitoring medication reorders, and ongoing issues were reported with timely ordering of non-narcotic medications. The pharmacist confirmed that the facility did not request a refill for the resident's tizanidine until after the medication had run out. The resident reported increased pain and distress during the period when the medication was unavailable.
Failure to Notify Physician of Significant Weight Changes
Penalty
Summary
Facility staff failed to notify the physician regarding significant weight changes for a resident with chronic heart failure, hypertension, and a pacemaker. The physician's order required daily weights and notification if the resident gained three or more pounds in 24 hours or exceeded 283 pounds. Review of the resident's records showed multiple instances where the resident's weight exceeded these parameters, but there was no documentation that the physician was notified. When interviewed, an LPN could not recall notifying the physician or documenting such notification, and both the Administrator and DNS confirmed that staff were expected to follow the physician's order and report weight changes as directed.
Failure to Timely Report Fall with Major Injury
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to report a fall with major injury to the State Survey Agency within 24 hours as required. A resident with diabetes and kidney failure, admitted in December 2023, sustained a fall while working with physical therapy. Following the fall, the resident complained of pain, and x-rays were ordered. The next day, the provider ordered the resident to be sent to the hospital for further evaluation, where multiple fractures in the right leg were identified. Despite these findings, the former Director of Nursing Services (DNS) did not file a Facility Reported Incident (FRI), believing it was unnecessary since the injuries were not considered serious bodily injury according to her interpretation of the FRI form. The current DNS also acknowledged that an FRI was not submitted for the incident.
Failure to Provide and Document Required Nail Care for Dependent Diabetic Resident
Penalty
Summary
A resident with diabetes, osteoarthritis, fragile skin, decreased mobility, and cognitive deficits was admitted to the facility and had a care plan intervention to keep fingernails short. The clinical record showed an order for daily shift fingernail care every Friday, which was discontinued, and no further documentation of diabetic nail care was found for April and May 2025. Observations on two occasions revealed the resident's fingernails were approximately half an inch long and jagged, and the resident expressed concern about potential injury from the nails. Staff confirmed the resident's nails were long and that there was no documentation of nail care provided. Facility policy required nurses to provide and document nail care for diabetic residents, but this was not done for the resident in question.
Failure to Provide Trauma-Informed, Person-Centered Care for Resident with PTSD
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to provide trauma-informed care for a resident with a documented history of PTSD, anxiety, altered mental status with auditory hallucinations, and a history of sexual and physical trauma. The resident's PASRR Level I screening indicated serious mental illness, but required sections were left incomplete and there was no documentation of further assessment. A subsequent mental illness screening confirmed the need for specialized services, yet the necessary follow-up and documentation were not completed within the required timeframe. The resident's care plan acknowledged PTSD but did not document the trauma history or identify individual triggers, and interventions were limited to a psychiatric consult without person-centered details. The MDS and CAAs did not reference trauma-informed care planning, and the psychosocial evaluation failed to incorporate the resident's trauma history or PTSD-related concerns. Staff interviews revealed that the resident frequently referenced past traumas during personal care and exhibited behaviors consistent with re-experiencing traumatic events, such as mistrust, verbal aggression, and distress triggered by loud noises or unfamiliar staff. Staff acknowledged the lack of appropriate follow-up on the PASRR and incomplete documentation, as well as the absence of identified triggers and person-centered interventions in the care plan. The failure to incorporate trauma-informed, person-centered care planning placed the resident at risk for unmet psychosocial needs and a potential decline in quality of life.
Expired Medications Found in Storage Room and Medication Cart
Penalty
Summary
Surveyors observed that expired medications were present in both the medication storage room and on a medication cart. Specifically, three bottles of Pro Stat AWC liquid, one bottle of aspirin 325 mg tablets, and thirty-three boxes of bisacodyl 10 mg suppositories, all with expiration dates in April 2025, were found in the medication storage room. Additionally, one bottle of aspirin 325 mg tablets with the same expiration date was found on medication cart number 2. Staff interviews confirmed that the facility's expectation was for expired medications to be removed from circulation and destroyed, but these expired items remained accessible at the time of the survey.
Latest citations in Oregon
A resident with mild cognitive impairment, poor safety awareness, and diabetic neuropathy, which reduced sensation in the feet, was known to slide out of bed at night. The bed was positioned too close to a baseboard heater, and the resident rolled out of bed and placed a foot directly on the heater. A CNA later found the resident on the floor with the foot on the heater, and assessment documented multiple small second-degree burns with blisters on the left foot and toes caused by direct contact with the heater.
The facility failed to maintain an effective pest control program, resulting in an ongoing roach infestation documented over several months. The contracted pest control provider serviced the building only once per month and reported continued evidence of roaches, while indicating that more frequent applications were needed. The Administrator acknowledged persistent roach problems throughout the facility, and several CNAs reported seeing roaches, with some noting that sightings were not consistently documented and one CNA unaware of the pest control log. This lack of consistent reporting and insufficient pest control measures placed residents at risk for exposure to household pests and increased health risks.
The facility failed to maintain a clean and homelike environment when a cognitively intact resident with anxiety reported that their room had not been cleaned for several days, and surveyors observed dirty floors, debris, dark stains in the toilet bowl, and a urine odor in the bathroom. The shared bathroom and multiple shower rooms were also found with dark substances on toilet surfaces, unclean baseboards, and unkept conditions. Only one housekeeping staff member, the Director of Housekeeping, was working at the time of the survey, and leadership acknowledged an expectation that resident areas be clean.
A resident with diabetes and a history of lower extremity wounds had orders and care plans for weekly diabetic foot checks, weekly head‑to‑toe skin inspections, and daily foot monitoring, yet staff documented completed assessments with no issues while the resident’s legs and feet were not actually visualized, refusals were not consistently documented, and the provider was not notified despite the resident later being observed with dirty, adherent socks, a malodorous, raw‑appearing ankle area, and a blood‑tinged bandage stuck to the skin. Another resident with diabetes on hemodialysis had multiple scheduled and sliding‑scale insulin aspart doses administered significantly later than ordered, with no progress notes explaining the delays, while the resident and an RN reported that nighttime insulin was often late. A third resident admitted with anxiety and panic disorder had ordered lorazepam not available on the night of admission due to the prescription not being sent to the pharmacy, was unable to receive a dose from the backup supply because of a dose mismatch, and did not receive scheduled doses the following day, with no documented follow‑up by nursing on the cause or status of the delayed medication.
The facility failed to provide ordered PT, OT, and SLP services and to complete timely therapy evaluations for several residents. One resident with a stroke and fall history was ordered PT, OT, and SLP; PT was delivered less frequently than prescribed, SLP treatments were not documented after being ordered, and OT evaluation occurred weeks late with only limited OT sessions provided. Another resident with diabetes and protein-calorie malnutrition was discharged from the hospital with a mechanical soft diet and SLP orders but did not receive an SLP assessment for over two weeks and remained on modified textures until then. A third resident with muscle weakness had an OT order but did not receive an OT evaluation for more than two months and reported never receiving OT, which was corroborated by multiple CNAs and an RN. A fourth resident with an anoxic brain injury and femur fracture had an orthopedic PT order that was never acknowledged or communicated to therapy, and no PT was provided. Staff, including the Administrator and rehab leadership, confirmed these lapses and delays in therapy services and evaluations.
A resident admitted with spinal stenosis, chronic back pain, anxiety, panic disorder, and opioid dependence had a PRN hydrocodone-acetaminophen order entered on admission, but the medication was not available for use until the early morning of the next day. The admitting LPN reportedly told the resident and a complainant that the pain medication would arrive within a few hours, yet the prescription was not sent to the pharmacy, and there was no documentation of follow-up or explanation for the delay. During the night, the resident repeatedly requested pain medication, reported significant pain to a CNA and to a complainant by phone, and an RN later confirmed the drug was unavailable until a new prescription and access to backup stock were obtained.
A significant med error occurred when an LPN gave a resident 12 meds intended for another resident instead of the resident’s scheduled morning meds. The resident, who was cognitively intact and had HTN, reported feeling weak after taking the pills, and staff later found very low BP. The resident was sent to the hospital and diagnosed with bradycardia, hypotension, and transient circulatory shock secondary to an unintentional medication overdose, requiring ICU care and vasopressor support.
Unsecured Medication and Treatment Carts: Medication and treatment carts on the 200 Hall were observed unlocked on multiple occasions while staff were away from them or out of sight. An RN, an LPN, and another RN each confirmed the carts were unlocked, and residents’ prescribed medications and a treatment cart containing insulin and needles were inside. Staff stated carts were expected to be locked whenever unattended.
Failure to perform hand hygiene during wound care was observed for a resident with diabetes and a pressure ulcer. An LPN removed the old dressing and adjusted the resident’s incontinent brief, then acknowledged gloves should have been changed when moving from a dirty task to a clean task and that hand hygiene should have been performed before putting on clean gloves. The DNS stated staff were expected to follow infection control standards, including changing gloves as needed and performing hand hygiene when gloves were removed.
Incomplete Care Plans for Wound VAC and Behavioral Needs: Two residents had care plans that did not include needed interventions tied to wound VAC care, and one resident’s plan also lacked target behaviors and interventions related to anxiety and depression meds. Staff acknowledged the missing care plan information for the wound and psychotropic-related needs.
Resident Burn from Contact with Baseboard Heater Due to Inadequate Hazard Prevention
Penalty
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure a resident was protected from accident hazards related to a baseboard heater, resulting in second-degree burns. The resident had diagnoses including stroke and diabetic neuropathy, a condition causing numbness in the hands and feet, and was care planned for impaired cognition and poor safety awareness, including sliding out of bed at night and fidgeting with items on the walls. The resident’s MDS showed mild cognitive impairment with a BIMS score of 13/15. Despite these known risks, the resident’s bed was positioned too close to a baseboard heater in the room. On the night of the incident, the resident rolled out of bed and placed their left foot on the baseboard heater. A CNA found the resident lying on the floor, whimpering, with the left foot resting on the heater. Due to the resident’s diabetic neuropathy, staff reported the resident would not have been aware of the injury as it was occurring. The CNA removed the resident’s foot from the heater and notified the charge nurse. Subsequent assessment and a Skin and Wound Assessment documented second-degree burns with multiple small blisters on the left foot and toes, each approximately 0.2 cm in length and width. The administrator and RN case manager acknowledged that the burns were caused by direct contact with the baseboard heater after the resident rolled out of bed.
Failure to Maintain Effective Pest Control for Ongoing Roach Infestation
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to maintain an effective pest control program, as evidenced by ongoing roach activity documented over several months and corroborated by staff and the contracted pest control provider. On 4/22/26, the contracted pest control technician (Witness 9) was observed placing roach traps and reported that, per contract, he only serviced the facility once per month. He stated he had seen evidence of roaches for months, though not rodents, and indicated that the facility really needed pest control services twice per month to eradicate the roaches. Review of the Pest Control Log on 4/22/26 showed roach sightings reported from 10/2025 through 4/2026. The Administrator (Staff 1) acknowledged ongoing roach concerns throughout the facility and stated he had asked the pest control provider during past and recent monthly visits for more frequent service to control pests, especially roaches. Multiple CNAs (Staff 43, Staff 44, and Staff 27) reported seeing roaches in the facility, with Staff 43 and Staff 44 stating that sightings were not always written or reported in the Pest Control Log, and Staff 27 stating she was unaware of the Pest Control Log for reporting pest sightings. On 4/27/26, the Administrator confirmed the ongoing roach issue and stated he expected the facility to be pest free. This deficiency placed residents at risk for exposure to household pests and increased health risks, as the facility did not ensure that pest sightings were consistently documented or that pest control services were provided at a frequency sufficient to address the persistent roach problem.
Failure to Maintain Clean and Homelike Resident Rooms and Bathrooms
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to provide a safe, clean, comfortable, and homelike environment when resident rooms, shared bathrooms, and shower rooms were observed to be unclean and poorly maintained. Resident 41, admitted in 2025 with diagnoses including anxiety and assessed as cognitively intact on a 1/28/26 Quarterly MDS, reported that the room was not cleaned regularly and had not been cleaned since 4/17/26, attributing this to the facility often being short staffed. On 4/19/26, surveyors observed that the floor in the resident’s room appeared unwashed with dark spots around the toilet and throughout the bathroom, and later that day the room had a dirty floor with debris, dark stains in the toilet bowl, and a bathroom that smelled of urine. The shared bathroom for the room was also observed with dark stains in the toilet bowl. On 4/19/26, Staff 19, the Director of Housekeeping, was observed to be the only housekeeping staff working in the facility and confirmed he was the only person working in housekeeping when the survey team entered. During a subsequent facility walkthrough on 4/24/26 with Staff 19 and Staff 20, the Regional Director of Housekeeping, they confirmed the presence of a dark substance on the toilet seat, handle, and tank in the shared bathroom, as well as unclean floor baseboards in the room. They also confirmed that resident shower rooms on all three halls appeared unclean and unkept, with items left in the rooms. The Administrator later acknowledged during a walkthrough that he expected residents’ rooms and areas to be clean.
Failure to Monitor Skin, Administer Insulin Timely, and Provide Ordered Anxiolytic Medication
Penalty
Summary
The deficiency involves failures to provide treatment and care according to physician orders and residents’ needs in the areas of skin monitoring, insulin administration, and psychotropic medication management for three residents. For one resident with diabetes and a history of bilateral lower extremity and right foot wounds, the wound care provider documented that all wounds had healed and recommended ongoing monitoring for reopening or new wounds. The resident’s care plans and physician orders required weekly diabetic foot checks, weekly head‑to‑toe skin inspections, daily inspection of the feet during ADLs, and notification of the provider and resident care manager of any new skin issues or refusals. Documentation on the TAR showed that weekly diabetic foot checks and skin inspections were marked as completed with no issues, and a quarterly nursing evaluation indicated no skin integrity concerns, despite the resident’s documented routine refusals of care. During observation, the resident was found wearing pants, thick socks, and heavy boots, and reported having trouble with socks and leg pain for a couple of months. When the resident pulled up a pant leg, the surveyor observed a dark red sock covered in flaked skin, bright red and raw‑appearing skin with a large indent at the ankle, a malodorous odor, and a dirty, blood‑tinged bandage stuck to the skin under the sock. The resident’s socks appeared dirty and covered in flaked skin, and the resident’s speech was disorganized. Staff interviews revealed that some nurses did not complete skin checks, a CNA had never visualized this resident’s legs or feet due to refusals to shower or remove shoes, and the LPN who documented a head‑to‑toe skin inspection stated she had never actually completed one for this resident and did not recall the documented assessment. Another LPN stated she had never assessed the resident’s feet and that her TAR entries reflected refusals, but she had not notified the provider. The resident care manager and DNS acknowledged uncertainty about when to notify the provider and confirmed the provider had not been notified of repeated refusals of skin inspections or diabetic foot checks. For a second resident with diabetes requiring hemodialysis, physician orders required scheduled insulin aspart doses with meals and additional sliding‑scale insulin before meals and at bedtime at specific times. Review of the diabetic administration record showed multiple instances where both scheduled and sliding‑scale insulin doses were administered significantly later than the ordered times, with no documentation in the clinical record explaining the delays. The resident reported that insulin was often not administered timely, especially at bedtime, and described being a brittle diabetic for whom timely insulin was very important. An RN confirmed that the resident’s blood sugars dropped quickly and that the resident had reported late nighttime insulin administration, and stated that night shift nurses could become busy and unable to give insulin on time. The resident care manager confirmed the late administrations, stated that nurses were required to write progress notes when insulin was given late, and acknowledged that no such notes were present for the identified dates. For a third resident admitted with spinal stenosis, anxiety disorder, panic disorder, and opioid dependence, admission orders included lorazepam 1 mg tablets scheduled twice daily and an additional PRN evening dose for generalized anxiety disorder. The MAR showed that the scheduled lorazepam doses were not administered at the ordered morning and midday times on the day after admission, and that the PRN evening dose was instead administered in the morning, contrary to the order. The admitting LPN did not recall the resident or any issues with lorazepam delivery and had no documentation clarifying whether or when the prescription was sent to the pharmacy. The complainant reported that the admitting nurse had told the resident the lorazepam would arrive within a few hours, but the resident later called in distress stating the medication was not available; when the complainant contacted the facility, they were told the prescription had not been sent to the pharmacy. A CNA stated the resident was agitated the night of admission, requested anti‑anxiety medication several times, and called the complainant twice about not receiving medication. The night RN confirmed the resident appeared agitated, that the lorazepam order had not been sent to the pharmacy, that the medication was not available, and that a pull from the backup supply was denied due to a dose mismatch, resulting in the resident not receiving lorazepam the night of admission or the scheduled doses the following day, with no documented follow‑up on the delay in the medical record.
Failure to Provide Ordered PT, OT, and SLP Services and Timely Evaluations
Penalty
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to provide specialized rehabilitative services as ordered for multiple residents. One resident admitted with a stroke and history of falls had physician orders for PT, OT, and SLP evaluations and treatments as indicated. PT assessed this resident for therapy five times per week for a defined certification period, but documentation showed PT was only provided four times per week during several weeks. SLP initially did not recommend services, but after a subsequent assessment on 1/19/26, the resident was ordered SLP twice weekly for 60 days, with no documentation of any SLP treatments after that date. OT did not evaluate this resident until 42 days after admission, and although OT determined a need for services five days per week for 60 days, the resident received OT on only a limited number of dates before discharge. The Administrator confirmed that therapy services were not provided as prescribed and that evaluations were not completed within the expected timeframe. Another resident, with diagnoses including diabetes and mild protein-calorie malnutrition, was transferred from the hospital with orders for a mechanical soft diet and SLP evaluation and treatment. The SLP assessment did not occur until 17 days after readmission, during which time the resident continued on mechanical soft diet textures. The resident reported it took about a month to get off puree foods and stated they were told the facility needed to hire more SLP staff before an assessment could be completed. The Regional Director of Rehabilitation and the Administrator both confirmed the delay in SLP assessment and were unable to explain why the evaluation was not completed sooner, despite existing orders for SLP evaluation and treatment. A third resident admitted with muscle weakness had physician orders dated 2/12/26 for OT evaluation and treatment, but the OT evaluation was not completed until 4/20/26. The admission MDS indicated the resident had not received any therapy services in the seven days prior to that assessment. The resident stated they had not received OT and were interested in therapy to help them leave the facility. Multiple CNAs and an RN reported they had never observed this resident working with therapy since admission. The Rehabilitation Director acknowledged the OT evaluation was not timely and cited difficulty maintaining Certified Occupational Therapy Assistants. In a fourth case, another resident with anoxic brain injury and a right femur fracture had an orthopedic order for PT, but the clinical record contained no evidence that the PT order was acknowledged, clarified, or communicated to the therapy department, and the resident did not receive PT. An RN case manager stated the order must have been missed and confirmed that therapy was not provided.
Failure to Ensure Timely Availability of Ordered PRN Opioid for New Admission
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to provide timely and appropriate pain management for a cognitively intact resident admitted with spinal stenosis, dorsalgia, anxiety disorder, panic disorder, and opioid dependence. On admission, the resident had an order for hydrocodone-acetaminophen 10 mg-325 mg every four hours as needed for pain, entered on the Medication Administration Record on the day of admission. However, the first documented administration of this medication did not occur until the early morning of the following day. During this period, the ordered hydrocodone-acetaminophen was not available in the facility because the prescription had not been sent to the pharmacy, and there was no documentation by the admitting nurse explaining the delay or any follow-up on obtaining the medication. According to interviews, the admitting nurse reportedly told the resident and a complainant that the hydrocodone-acetaminophen would arrive within a few hours of admission, but by late that night the resident was calling the complainant in distress, reporting pain and lack of access to the medication. A CNA stated the resident was in pain, agitated, and repeatedly requested pain medication, and that these requests were reported to the nurse. An RN on the night shift confirmed receiving a call from the complainant about the resident’s pain and discovered that the prescription had not been sent to the pharmacy, prompting a request to the on-call provider and use of the backup supply before the first dose was finally administered. Resident care managers later stated that, given the resident’s condition and admission from home without a hard copy prescription, the admitting nurse should have obtained a STAT prescription and documented diligent follow-up, but the record contained no such documentation and the medication was not readily available when requested.
Medication Error Resulted in Hospitalization for Hypotension and Shock
Penalty
Summary
A significant medication error occurred when a licensed nurse administered another resident’s medications to a cognitively intact resident with diagnoses including post-surgical digestive system aftercare and essential hypertension. The resident’s medication administration record showed scheduled morning medications including amiodarone, losartan, and metoprolol, and the resident stated that on the morning of the error the nurse gave more pills than usual and told the resident this was the correct amount. The resident reported feeling very weak after taking the medications. The nurse later stated he accidentally gave the resident 12 medications intended for another resident and did not follow the five rights of medication administration, explaining that he was distracted and unfamiliar with the area. Staff observed the resident to be unusually confused that morning, and the resident’s blood pressure was found to be very low after the error was recognized. The resident was sent to the hospital, where records showed bradycardia, hypotension, and transient circulatory shock secondary to unintentional medication overdose, requiring ICU admission and vasopressor support.
Unsecured Medication and Treatment Carts
Penalty
Summary
Medication and treatment carts on the 200 Hall were observed unsecured during multiple survey observations, contrary to the facility’s Security of Medication Cart policy, which required carts to be locked during medication pass, before a nurse entered a resident’s room, and whenever the cart was out of the nurse’s view. On 4/20/26, an RN was observed standing next to an unlocked medication cart and then walking away from it before locking it; she stated she did not have the key because she was not in charge of the cart and could not find the person responsible for it, while confirming residents’ prescribed medications were in the cart. On 4/21/26, an unlocked treatment cart was observed in the 200 Hall while an LPN and another staff member were in the bistro area and not within sight of the cart; the LPN confirmed the cart was unlocked and stated the expectation was to lock medication and treatment carts whenever walking away from them. On 4/23/26, another unlocked medication cart was observed in the 200 Hall, and an RN confirmed it was unlocked and that residents’ prescribed medications were inside; she stated she was distracted and more accustomed to working night shift. Later that day, the DNS stated staff were expected to lock medication and treatment carts whenever away from them for safety purposes.
Failure to Perform Hand Hygiene During Wound Care
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to ensure hand hygiene was performed during wound care for Resident 7, who was admitted in 3/2026 with a diagnosis of diabetes and was being treated for a pressure ulcer. During observation on 4/21/26 at 11:14 AM, an LPN removed the resident’s old pressure ulcer dressing and adjusted the resident’s incontinent brief, then was stopped by the surveyor before cleaning the pressure ulcer. The LPN stated he should have changed gloves when moving from a dirty task to a clean task, then removed the gloves and was stopped again before putting on clean gloves to ensure hand hygiene was performed. The facility’s Standard Precautions policy stated hand hygiene was to be performed when hands were not visibly soiled and gloves were to be changed as necessary during care to prevent cross-contamination when moving from a dirty site to a clean site. On 4/24/26, the DNS stated staff were to follow infection control standards including changing gloves as needed and performing hand hygiene when gloves were removed.
Incomplete Care Plans for Wound VAC and Behavioral Needs
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to develop comprehensive person-centered care plans for 2 of 7 sampled residents reviewed for unnecessary medications and skin conditions. Resident 6 was admitted with diagnoses including surgical wound infection and adjustment disorder with depressed mood. The admission MDS showed a history of depression, use of medication for anxiety, and a wound VAC. Physician orders included care for the wound VAC, hydroxyzine for anxiety, and duloxetine for depression, but the comprehensive care plan did not include interventions related to the wound VAC, target behaviors, or interventions related to mood or anxiety associated with hydroxyzine and duloxetine. Resident 7 was admitted with diagnoses including a pressure wound and malnutrition. The admission MDS identified a wound VAC, and physician orders included care for the wound VAC. However, the revised comprehensive care plan did not include any interventions related to the wound VAC. During interviews, staff acknowledged that Resident 6’s care plan lacked wound VAC information and target behaviors or interventions for hydroxyzine and duloxetine, and that Resident 7’s care plan contained no information related to the wound VAC.
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.



