The Manor, Inc.
Inspection history, citations, penalties and survey trends for this long-term care facility in Morrisville, Vermont.
- Location
- 577 Washington Highway, Morrisville, Vermont 05661
- CMS Provider Number
- 475057
- Inspections on file
- 16
- Latest survey
- April 15, 2026
- Citations (last 12 mo.)
- 8
Citation history
Health deficiencies cited at The Manor, Inc. during CMS and state inspections, most recent first.
The facility did not verify or document required competencies for a large number of contracted nursing staff, including licensed nurses and LNAs obtained through staffing agencies. Record review showed missing resident-care competencies for a contracted LNA, despite the facility assessment requiring skills such as wound management, dementia care training, behavioral interventions, infection prevention, safe lift/transfer, and emergency response preparedness. The DON reported that new and agency staff often did not receive facility training, that agency staff were only required to read policies through the agency system, and that competency was informally monitored after assignment rather than verified beforehand. A contracted LNA described starting work by going directly to the nurse’s station, receiving an assignment, and beginning work without task-specific orientation.
Two residents’ rights to privacy were not maintained during personal and incontinence care. In one instance, a resident received incontinence care from an LNA with the hall door open and the privacy curtain between beds not drawn, while a roommate and visiting family members were present and the resident remained visible. In another instance, a resident was exposed in bed while three LNAs provided personal care with the hall door wide open, and the door was only closed after staff noticed surveyors. The DON later confirmed that LNAs were expected to ensure privacy by using the curtain and/or closing the door.
A resident with several weeks of itching and self-inflicted scratches to the arms and hands was observed actively scratching with deep scratches present, while documentation showed repeated episodes of pruritus and open skin areas. Nursing staff had previously obtained a short course of Triamcinolone cream and later left messages for the physician requesting systemic medication (cetirizine) and reporting continued scratching and inflamed areas, but no new orders or documented physician response were received despite multiple calls and faxes. This resulted in the resident not being under timely physician supervision or receiving updated treatment in response to ongoing symptoms.
Surveyors found that physicians did not complete required total program of care reviews for two residents. One resident with multiple complex conditions, including dementia, cachexia, pressure ulcers, malnutrition, and dysphagia, had regulatory visit notes over an extended period that lacked documentation of a comprehensive care review, listed two medications that were not actually ordered, and failed to reflect documented MASD and pressure injuries noted in nursing progress notes. The DON confirmed the absence of a total care review and reported difficulty obtaining such documentation from some providers. Another resident admitted earlier in the year had no provider visit notes that met the definition of a total program of care review, including review of all current meds, treatments, and the comprehensive care plan.
An LPN failed to follow hand hygiene requirements while preparing and administering medications to two residents, including not using hand sanitizer or soap and water before or after wearing gloves, administering eye drops, and replacing a medication patch. The LPN later acknowledged not performing hand hygiene and described a practice of cleaning hands only after several medications or residents or after completing direct care. Review of facility policies showed that hand hygiene is required before handling medications, before and after resident contact, after glove removal, and before and after administering ophthalmic and topical preparations, and the DON confirmed the nurse did not follow these policies.
Surveyors identified multiple deficiencies in food storage and sanitation, including expired and undated food items, uncovered and improperly stored food, and widespread debris and unclean equipment throughout the kitchen. A kitchen staff member confirmed the presence of expired, undated, and improperly stored items, as well as unsanitary conditions, in violation of facility policy.
A resident with severe cognitive impairment and a history of abuse was sexually assaulted by a staff member, as witnessed by an LPN. The resident required hospital care, where a genital injury was confirmed. The facility failed to screen all residents for abuse after the incident and did not ensure the staff member had a national background check or abuse prevention training, as confirmed by the DON and Administrator.
The facility did not conduct required national background checks for most employees, including an LNA who sexually assaulted a resident. Review of staff files showed that the majority of employees lacked this screening, and the facility's policy did not address state requirements for national background checks. Leadership confirmed a lack of understanding and implementation of these requirements.
A facility failed to provide required abuse prevention training to an LNA who subsequently committed a substantiated sexual assault against a resident. Despite policies mandating abuse education upon hire, the LNA worked for over two months without completing any such training, as confirmed by both the DON and HR Director.
Lack of Verified Competencies for Contracted Nursing Staff
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to ensure that contracted nursing staff, including licensed nurses and LNAs obtained through staffing agencies, had documented competencies matching residents' assessed needs and care plans. Review of two LNA employee records, one permanent and one contracted through Clipboard Health, showed that required competencies for resident care were missing for the contracted LNA. The facility assessment dated 3/9/26 identified required nursing staff competencies such as wound management skills, dementia care training, behavioral intervention training, infection prevention practices, safe lift and transfer training, and emergency response preparedness, but these were not verified for agency staff. A staffing list showed 48 nursing staff identified as contract/agency, and the DON confirmed that agency staff made up a large part of the nursing workforce. In interviews, the DON stated that the facility did not always provide facility training to new staff, especially agency staff, because of uncertainty about how long they would stay and challenges in hiring new staff. The DON explained that Clipboard Health staff were required to read facility policies in the agency system before picking up a shift, and that facility staff would monitor them, but there was no verification of competency before they worked with residents and no documentation of competencies by the facility. A contracted LNA reported that upon starting work, the process was to enter through the front door, go to the nurse's station, receive an assignment, and "jump right in" without orientation to new tasks. The DON confirmed that the listed competencies in the facility assessment were not verified for contracted nursing staff.
Failure to Maintain Privacy During Personal and Incontinence Care
Penalty
Summary
The deficiency involves failure to maintain residents’ privacy and confidentiality during provision of personal and incontinence care for two sampled residents. On 4/13/2026 at 1:40 PM, one resident (Resident #33) was observed receiving incontinence care from an LNA with the door to the hallway open and the privacy curtain between beds not drawn, while their roommate (Resident #4) was in the other bed. Another LNA entered and closed the door, but when two family members of the roommate entered the room, the privacy curtain remained open and Resident #33 was visible. On 4/14/2026 at approximately 3:30 PM, Resident #4 was observed in bed receiving personal care from three LNAs with the door to the hallway wide open and the resident exposed on the bed until one LNA noticed the surveyors and closed the door. Per interview on 4/15/2026 at 12:30 PM, the DON confirmed that LNAs should have provided privacy to the residents by drawing the privacy curtain and/or closing the door, indicating that the observed practices did not align with the facility’s expectations for maintaining resident privacy during personal care.
Failure to Obtain Timely Physician Response for Ongoing Pruritus and Skin Injury
Penalty
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure that a physician supervised and provided consultation or treatment after being contacted regarding a resident with ongoing pruritus and self-inflicted skin injuries. During an interview and observation, the resident reported itching for about three weeks, stated they had requested medication to help, and was observed scratching both arms, which showed deep scratches on the upper and lower arms. The resident’s care plan documented multiple episodes of self-inflicted scratches to the hands and forearm over several weeks, with interventions directing staff to report abnormalities, failure to heal, and signs and symptoms of infection or maceration to the physician. Record review showed that on 3/27/2026 a verbal order was received to restart scheduled Triamcinolone cream to the right arm and left shin daily for 14 days. A skin/wound note dated 4/5/2026 documented that the resident continued to have pruritus to all extremities, with one open area on the left hand and no signs of infection, and that a message was left for the provider questioning the need for systemic medication (cetirizine) to ease the pruritic issue and assist with sleep. A communication note dated 4/11/2026 documented a call to update the physician that there were no changes to the areas on the arms and legs and that the resident continued to scratch and areas remained inflamed, with staff “waiting on updated orders,” but no physician response or new orders were documented. In interviews, an RN and the DON confirmed there had been a delay in physician response despite multiple calls and faxes and that the physician had not yet responded to the request for treatment for this resident’s ongoing scratching and skin issues.
Failure to Complete Required Total Program of Care Reviews
Penalty
Summary
Surveyors identified that physicians failed to complete required total program of care reviews for two residents. One resident with multiple complex diagnoses, including dementia, anxiety, osteoporosis, cachexia, GERD, adult failure to thrive, sacral pressure ulcer, malnutrition, depression, bipolar disorder, and dysphagia, had physician/provider regulatory visit progress notes over a one-year period that did not document a total review of care. At each visit, the physician documented that the resident was taking Vitamin B-12 1000 mcg daily and Diflucan 100 mg daily, even though these medications were not present in the current physician orders. Additionally, nursing progress notes documented the development and treatment of MASD on specific dates, but the physician’s regulatory visit note during that same period did not reflect that the resident was being treated for MASD. Nursing progress notes for the same resident also documented a stage 2 pressure ulcer on the coccyx and bilateral blanchable erythema on the heels, but the corresponding physician/provider regulatory visit note did not document the presence of these wounds or the care needed to treat them. The DON confirmed that the physician had not documented a total review of care for this resident and reported difficulty getting certain providers to complete such reviews. For another resident admitted in January 2025, review of physician/provider notes from admission through the survey date showed no provider visit notes that met the definition of a total program of care review, including a review of all current medications, treatments, and all aspects of the resident’s comprehensive plan of care.
Failure to Follow Hand Hygiene Protocol During Medication Administration
Penalty
Summary
Surveyors identified a deficiency in infection prevention and control related to hand hygiene during medication administration for two residents. On 4/14/2026 at 8:22 AM, an LPN was observed preparing and administering medications to Resident #26 without performing hand hygiene with either hand sanitizer or soap and water before or after wearing gloves. During the same medication pass, the LPN also failed to perform hand hygiene before or after administering eye drops and after replacing a medication patch on the back of Resident #28. In an interview shortly after the observation, the LPN acknowledged not performing hand hygiene for these residents and stated that she typically washes her hands or uses hand sanitizer only after every few medications or residents or when she completes direct care. Review of the facility’s Hand Hygiene Policy (reviewed 4/2019) showed that gloves do not replace hand hygiene and that alcohol-based hand sanitizer or soap and water must be used before preparing or handling medications, before and after direct resident contact, and after glove removal. Review of the Medication Administration-General Guidelines Policy (reviewed 8/2025) indicated that staff administering medications must adhere to good hand hygiene before and after administration of ophthalmic and topical preparations. The DON confirmed that the nurse’s actions did not follow facility policies and practices for hand hygiene.
Deficient Food Storage and Sanitation Practices Identified in Kitchen
Penalty
Summary
Surveyors observed multiple failures in food storage and sanitation practices within the facility's kitchen. An open and undated package of waffles was found in the freezer, and a container of rotting lettuce was present in the walk-in refrigerator. Additional issues included uncovered celery, an open and undated package of hot dogs, a container of raw chicken sitting in its own juices, and an undated package of American cheese slices. Expired food items, such as two large containers of yogurt and a container of pasta salad, were also found. A kitchen staff member confirmed that items were expired, undated, and improperly stored, and admitted to not knowing how long items should remain in the refrigerator. The staff member repackaged and dated the hot dogs instead of discarding them and acknowledged that rotting and uncovered items should have been discarded or covered according to facility policy. Further inspection revealed unsanitary conditions throughout the kitchen. Debris was found under the steam table, on the cart holding serving trays, and in the spooning tray. Sticky substances were present on shelves holding food items, and the microwave contained debris and had not been cleaned. Dirty muffin containers were found on the clean dish rack, and storage containers for oats and fry mix were coated with dust and debris. Fans in the dish room were also coated with dust and debris. A kitchen staff member confirmed these observations and stated that floors are supposed to be cleaned at night. These findings demonstrate a failure to maintain safe food storage and sanitary conditions as required by facility policy.
Failure to Protect Resident from Sexual Abuse by Staff
Penalty
Summary
A resident with Alzheimer's disease, major depressive disorder, anxiety disorder, and a history of domestic abuse, who was severely cognitively impaired and required assistance from two staff for bed mobility, personal hygiene, and toileting, was not protected from sexual abuse by staff. On the night of the incident, an LPN entered the resident's room after hearing a call for help and witnessed a staff member (LNA) in the act of sexually assaulting the resident. The LNA was found with pants and underwear down, positioned between the resident's legs, and was observed engaging in sexual activity. The resident was subsequently transferred to the hospital, where a sexual assault nurse exam revealed a genital tear and trace blood, and the resident was given antibiotics for STI prophylaxis. The facility's investigation revealed several failures in protocol. Only a portion of the residents were screened for abuse following the incident, with no males or residents with severe cognitive impairment included in the sample. Additionally, the LNA involved did not have a national background check or documented abuse education in their employee file. The Director of Nursing and Administrator confirmed these lapses, and the facility's own policy required such screenings and training to prevent abuse.
Failure to Implement National Background Checks for Employees
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to develop and implement a policy requiring national background checks for all employees, as evidenced by interviews and record reviews. Specifically, a licensed nursing assistant (LNA) was employed and worked for 73 days without a national background check, during which time the LNA sexually assaulted a resident. Review of employee files revealed that 4 out of 5 sampled employees did not have national background checks, and overall, 77 out of 103 staff members lacked this screening. The Human Resources Director confirmed that national background checks were only being conducted for agency staff, not for full-time, volunteer, or contracted staff. Despite state and federal requirements communicated to the facility in memos, which mandate national background checks prior to employment and at least annually, the facility's policy did not address these requirements. The Director of Nursing and the Administrator both confirmed a lack of understanding and implementation of these requirements. The facility's existing abuse prevention policy referenced several screening measures but did not specifically address the need for national background checks for all employees, nor did it reflect current state requirements.
Failure to Provide Abuse Training Prior to Substantiated Sexual Assault
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to provide required abuse prevention training to an employee prior to a substantiated incident of sexual assault. Specifically, one Licensed Nursing Assistant (LNA) worked at the facility for 73 days without any documented education or training on abuse, neglect, or exploitation, as confirmed by a review of the employee's human resources file and by the Human Resources Director. The facility's own policy requires that all staff and volunteers receive training on abuse policy and procedures upon hire and annually thereafter, but this was not followed in the case of this employee. The deficiency was identified after the facility substantiated that the LNA sexually assaulted a resident. During the investigation, surveyors reviewed the facility's educational materials and policies, which included training modules and handouts on abuse, neglect, exploitation, and reporting requirements. However, there was no evidence that the LNA in question had completed any of this required training prior to the incident. The Director of Nursing and Human Resources Director both confirmed the lack of abuse education for this employee.
Latest citations in Vermont
The facility failed to maintain clean, odor-free, and safe carpeted rooms on one floor, as evidenced by strong urine odors concentrated around a specific room, visible dark stains, food debris, and a wet urine spot on the carpet near a bathroom door. Multiple staff, including LPNs, housekeeping, the DON, and maintenance, confirmed that a resident in that room frequently removed briefs and urinated on the carpet, and that urine odors were sometimes noticeable from the hallway. Additional observations showed that several other carpeted rooms had tears, deterioration, brown stains, and loose tiles creating tripping hazards. Staff reported that carpets were only cleaned when issues were reported verbally, and there was no routine or tracked schedule for deep cleaning or shampooing, despite a written policy requiring periodic deep cleaning of carpets.
Surveyors found that the facility failed to remove expired medications from a medication storage room and a medication cart, including expired ibuprofen, cranberry pills, lorazepam, and liquid acetaminophen, despite a policy requiring expired drugs to be returned to the pharmacy or destroyed. They also observed multiple instances where an LPN left medication carts unlocked and unattended while entering resident rooms to administer medications, with residents present near the carts, contrary to the facility’s policy that medication carts not be left unattended if open or accessible.
A resident with a history of wandering and elopement was moved from a room without a mesh gate to a room with a mesh gate on the door and was later observed yelling and unable to open the gate, which prevented exit from the room. A roommate reported that this resident often had difficulty opening the gate and called for help. The DON stated that residents who wander generally do not have mesh gates, that both roommates should be able to open any gate on their door, and that an assessment and care plan entry should exist for each resident using a mesh gate. The DON was unable to produce an assessment for this resident, confirmed the resident was not care planned for the mesh gate, and acknowledged that if an ambulatory resident cannot open a gate, it could be considered a restraint, contrary to the facility’s resident rights policy prohibiting restraints used for discipline or convenience.
Surveyors found that the facility failed to revise care plans after falls for two residents with multiple conditions including weakness, peripheral neuropathy, unsteadiness, Parkinsonism, heart disease, CHF, and mood disorders. In both cases, nursing notes documented falls related to weakness and self-transfer, and existing care plans already identified fall risk. However, the care plans had not been updated with new fall-prevention interventions following the incidents, despite an IDT meeting note stating that one care plan had been updated as needed. The DON confirmed that care plans are expected to be revised after each fall and that this did not occur for these residents.
A resident on comfort care with multiple chronic conditions received incorrect morphine doses when staff failed to verify that the concentration on the morphine bottle matched the physician’s order. The order specified Morphine 20 mg/5 ml with a 1 ml (4 mg) PRN dose, but the bottle was labeled Morphine 20 mg/1 ml. Nursing staff administered multiple 1 ml doses (20 mg each) and later 2.5 ml doses (50 mg each) from this higher-concentration bottle, contrary to the ordered doses. The DON, ADON, and Administrator confirmed that this occurred despite a facility policy requiring adherence to the 5 Rights of medication administration, including verifying that the medication concentration on the container matches the provider’s order.
The facility did not maintain clean air vents and related ceiling surfaces in three common dining areas, where 14 ceiling vents were observed with dark black, speckled, fuzzy residue covering about half to three-quarters of each vent, and multiple ceiling tiles showed brown water stains. The Maintenance Director confirmed the buildup on vents and stains, reported no records of vent cleaning and stated vents had not been cleaned during his four months in the role, while also noting dust on four sprinklers. Facility policy requires annual cleaning of vents and air handling units, and the Administrator acknowledged vents should also be cleaned when dusty. The IP confirmed the vents needed cleaning, and the DON reported that a significant number of residents had chronic respiratory diagnoses. Information from a NADCA-certified company cited by surveyors stated that dirty ducts can accumulate contaminants and, in settings with residents who have compromised respiratory status, can contribute to exacerbation of chronic respiratory illnesses.
The facility did not verify or document required competencies for a large number of contracted nursing staff, including licensed nurses and LNAs obtained through staffing agencies. Record review showed missing resident-care competencies for a contracted LNA, despite the facility assessment requiring skills such as wound management, dementia care training, behavioral interventions, infection prevention, safe lift/transfer, and emergency response preparedness. The DON reported that new and agency staff often did not receive facility training, that agency staff were only required to read policies through the agency system, and that competency was informally monitored after assignment rather than verified beforehand. A contracted LNA described starting work by going directly to the nurse’s station, receiving an assignment, and beginning work without task-specific orientation.
Two residents’ rights to privacy were not maintained during personal and incontinence care. In one instance, a resident received incontinence care from an LNA with the hall door open and the privacy curtain between beds not drawn, while a roommate and visiting family members were present and the resident remained visible. In another instance, a resident was exposed in bed while three LNAs provided personal care with the hall door wide open, and the door was only closed after staff noticed surveyors. The DON later confirmed that LNAs were expected to ensure privacy by using the curtain and/or closing the door.
A resident with several weeks of itching and self-inflicted scratches to the arms and hands was observed actively scratching with deep scratches present, while documentation showed repeated episodes of pruritus and open skin areas. Nursing staff had previously obtained a short course of Triamcinolone cream and later left messages for the physician requesting systemic medication (cetirizine) and reporting continued scratching and inflamed areas, but no new orders or documented physician response were received despite multiple calls and faxes. This resulted in the resident not being under timely physician supervision or receiving updated treatment in response to ongoing symptoms.
Surveyors found that physicians did not complete required total program of care reviews for two residents. One resident with multiple complex conditions, including dementia, cachexia, pressure ulcers, malnutrition, and dysphagia, had regulatory visit notes over an extended period that lacked documentation of a comprehensive care review, listed two medications that were not actually ordered, and failed to reflect documented MASD and pressure injuries noted in nursing progress notes. The DON confirmed the absence of a total care review and reported difficulty obtaining such documentation from some providers. Another resident admitted earlier in the year had no provider visit notes that met the definition of a total program of care review, including review of all current meds, treatments, and the comprehensive care plan.
Failure to Maintain Clean, Odor-Free, and Safe Carpeted Resident Rooms
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to maintain a safe, clean, comfortable, and homelike environment on the second floor, particularly in and around one resident room and several other carpeted rooms. Upon entrance, surveyors detected a strong urine-like odor on the East Wing’s second level, concentrated around a specific room where the carpet had several large dark spots and visible food particles and debris on the floor. Multiple staff, including LPNs, the DON, housekeeping staff, and the Maintenance Supervisor, confirmed that urine odors were present at times in and around this room and that a resident in that room frequently removed briefs and urinated on the carpeted floor. On a later observation, the carpet in the same room had a wet spot by the bathroom door, which housekeeping staff identified as urine and confirmed could be smelled from outside the room. Review of facility conditions showed that 6 of 13 resident rooms with carpeted flooring had safety and/or sanitary concerns, including white spots, carpet deterioration by doors, large carpet tears, smaller tears, brown stains, and tile coming up and creating tripping hazards. One room with two large tears and staining near the bathroom door also smelled of urine. The Maintenance Supervisor stated that carpets were cleaned only when maintenance was informed of a need by word of mouth, and the DON and Housekeeping Supervisor confirmed there was no established or tracked schedule for deep cleaning or carpet shampooing, despite a written policy stating carpets should be deep cleaned approximately once per month or more often as needed. These observations and staff interviews demonstrated that the facility did not follow its own carpeting policy and did not have a routine process to ensure carpets were regularly cleaned and maintained in a sanitary and safe condition.
Expired Medications and Unsecured Medication Carts
Penalty
Summary
Surveyors identified that the facility did not ensure medications were properly stored and removed when expired, as required by its Medication Labeling and Storage policy. During an observation of a second-floor medication cart, the nursing supervisor confirmed the presence of multiple expired medications, including ibuprofen 200 mg tablets that expired in June 2025, cranberry pills 450 mg that expired in May 2024, lorazepam 1 mg tablets that expired in September 2025, and liquid acetaminophen 160 mg/5 mL that expired in November 2025. In a separate observation of the first-floor medication storage room, an LPN confirmed that a bottle of liquid pain relief (Tylenol) 160 mg/5 mL cherry flavor had expired in November 2025. The facility’s policy, revised in February 2023, states that medications should be returned to the pharmacy or destroyed when expired, but these expired medications remained in active storage areas. Surveyors also found that staff failed to keep medication carts locked when unattended, contrary to facility policy. On one occasion, a medication cart on the [NAME] Wing was observed unlocked and unattended while an LPN left to assist a resident; the LPN acknowledged that the cart should have been locked when unattended. During two separate medication administration observations on the East Wing, an LPN walked away from the medication cart, leaving it unlocked and out of sight while entering resident rooms to administer medications. In one instance, two residents were near the unattended cart, and in another, one resident was near the cart. The LPN confirmed in both instances that the medication cart should be locked when left unattended, and the facility’s policy specifies that carts used to transport medications and biologicals are not to be left unattended if open or otherwise potentially available to others.
Failure to Prevent Use of a Physical Restraint Without Assessment or Care Planning
Penalty
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure a resident was free from physical restraints when not required for medical treatment. Resident #36 was care planned for wandering and elopement and had a history of attempting to elope. The resident was moved from a room without a mesh gate to a room with a mesh gate on the door. During observation, the resident was seen in their room yelling and unable to open the mesh gate, which prevented them from leaving the room. Another resident sharing the room reported that the roommate sometimes had difficulty opening the mesh gate and would call for help. The DON stated that some residents request mesh gates to keep out other residents who wander into their rooms and that both residents in a room should be able to access and open the mesh gate, with an assessment documented in the system and the gate included on the care plan. The DON acknowledged that residents who wander typically do not have mesh gates on their doors, that Resident #36 was not assessed for the use of the mesh gate when moved to the new room, and that there was no assessment documentation for this resident. The DON also confirmed that Resident #36 was care planned for elopement and wandering but not for the mesh gate, and that if an ambulatory resident could not open a gate, it could be considered a restraint. The facility’s Resident Rights Policy states that residents have the right to be free from physical restraints imposed for discipline or convenience and not required to treat medical symptoms.
Failure to Revise Care Plans After Resident Falls
Penalty
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to review and revise care plans after resident falls, as required. One resident with diagnoses including anxiety disorder, major depressive disorder, peripheral neuropathy, atherosclerotic heart disease, weakness, and the presence of an artificial hip experienced an unwitnessed fall in the bathroom on 3/25/2026. Nursing progress notes documented the fall, and the resident’s care plan already identified a risk for falls related to weakness and peripheral neuropathy. However, the care plan, last updated on 3/18/2026, did not include any new interventions or revisions in response to the 3/25/2026 fall. A second resident, with diagnoses including muscle weakness, unsteadiness on feet, other drug-induced secondary Parkinsonism, hypertensive heart disease with heart failure, CHF, major depressive disorder, anxiety disorder, and difficulty walking, experienced a fall on 3/21/2026 while attempting to self-transfer. Nursing progress notes documented this fall, and the resident’s care plan identified a risk for falls related to weakness. The IDT met on 3/25/2026 and documented that the care plan had been updated as needed regarding this most recent fall. However, the care plan had last been revised on 3/8/2026 and did not reflect any new fall-prevention measures related to the 3/21/2026 incident. The DON confirmed in both cases that care plans are supposed to be revised and updated after each fall and acknowledged that this was not done for these two residents.
Failure to Verify Morphine Concentration Before Administration
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to ensure a resident was free from significant medication errors when staff did not verify that the morphine concentration on the bottle matched the physician’s written order. The resident, who had dementia, hypertensive heart disease, anxiety, depression, lymphedema, and unspecified seizures, was placed on comfort care. The physician ordered Morphine 20 mg/5 ml, with a dose of 1 ml (4 mg) by mouth every 2 hours as needed for pain or shortness of breath. The DON reported that this order was sent to the pharmacy and the medication was received, with the prescribed concentration (20 mg/5 ml) printed on a label attached to the bag in which the medication arrived. However, the morphine bottle itself was labeled with a different concentration of Morphine 20 mg/1 ml. Per review of the individual narcotic record and MAR, staff administered 1 ml doses from the bottle labeled Morphine 20 mg/1 ml (20 mg per dose) on multiple occasions, instead of the ordered 4 mg dose, on several dates. On one date, after a new order was written to increase the morphine to 20 mg/5 ml, 2.5 ml (10 mg) every 6 hours for pain or shortness of breath, staff administered two doses of 2.5 ml from the same bottle labeled Morphine 20 mg/1 ml, resulting in 50 mg per dose. During interviews, the DON, ADON, and Administrator confirmed that the morphine concentration on the bottle label was 20 mg/1 ml and acknowledged that their medication administration policy requires following the 5 Rights, including confirming that the medication concentration and dosage on the container match the provider’s order before administration.
Failure to Maintain Clean Air Vents and Ceiling Surfaces in Common Areas
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to maintain a safe, clean, and homelike environment in three resident common areas by not keeping ceiling air vents and related components clean. Facility policy for Plumbing, HVAC and Related Systems, revised in 2011, requires air vents and air handling units to be cleaned at least annually. Observations of three resident common areas revealed 14 ceiling air vents with a black and brown substance that appeared dark black, speckled, and fuzzy, covering approximately 50–75% of each vent. Multiple ceiling tiles in these areas also had brown stains that the Maintenance Director identified as old water damage. In addition, four sprinklers in one dining area had a gray substance on them that the Maintenance Director believed was dust. The Maintenance Director confirmed the presence of black and brown residue on the vents and brown stains on ceiling tiles and stated he did not have records of when the vents were last cleaned, noting they had not been cleaned during his approximately four months in the role. The Administrator stated that ducts are to be cleaned annually per facility policy and that maintenance is responsible, and acknowledged that vents should also be cleaned when they become dusty. The Infection Preventionist confirmed that the ceiling vents needed to be cleaned. The DON reported that 27 of the 87 residents in the facility had chronic respiratory diagnoses. A NADCA-certified company’s information, reviewed by surveyors, stated that air ducts can accumulate dust, debris, allergens, and pathogens over time and that in hospitals and nursing homes this can pose increased risk to residents with compromised immune systems or respiratory issues, and that dirty ducts can circulate contaminants and potentially exacerbate chronic respiratory conditions such as asthma, allergies, and other respiratory illnesses.
Lack of Verified Competencies for Contracted Nursing Staff
Penalty
Summary
The facility failed to ensure that contracted nursing staff, including licensed nurses and LNAs obtained through staffing agencies, had documented competencies matching residents' assessed needs and care plans. Review of two LNA employee records, one permanent and one contracted through Clipboard Health, showed that required competencies for resident care were missing for the contracted LNA. The facility assessment dated 3/9/26 identified required nursing staff competencies such as wound management skills, dementia care training, behavioral intervention training, infection prevention practices, safe lift and transfer training, and emergency response preparedness, but these were not verified for agency staff. A staffing list showed 48 nursing staff identified as contract/agency, and the DON confirmed that agency staff made up a large part of the nursing workforce. In interviews, the DON stated that the facility did not always provide facility training to new staff, especially agency staff, because of uncertainty about how long they would stay and challenges in hiring new staff. The DON explained that Clipboard Health staff were required to read facility policies in the agency system before picking up a shift, and that facility staff would monitor them, but there was no verification of competency before they worked with residents and no documentation of competencies by the facility. A contracted LNA reported that upon starting work, the process was to enter through the front door, go to the nurse's station, receive an assignment, and "jump right in" without orientation to new tasks. The DON confirmed that the listed competencies in the facility assessment were not verified for contracted nursing staff.
Failure to Maintain Privacy During Personal and Incontinence Care
Penalty
Summary
The deficiency involves failure to maintain residents’ privacy and confidentiality during provision of personal and incontinence care for two sampled residents. On 4/13/2026 at 1:40 PM, one resident (Resident #33) was observed receiving incontinence care from an LNA with the door to the hallway open and the privacy curtain between beds not drawn, while their roommate (Resident #4) was in the other bed. Another LNA entered and closed the door, but when two family members of the roommate entered the room, the privacy curtain remained open and Resident #33 was visible. On 4/14/2026 at approximately 3:30 PM, Resident #4 was observed in bed receiving personal care from three LNAs with the door to the hallway wide open and the resident exposed on the bed until one LNA noticed the surveyors and closed the door. Per interview on 4/15/2026 at 12:30 PM, the DON confirmed that LNAs should have provided privacy to the residents by drawing the privacy curtain and/or closing the door, indicating that the observed practices did not align with the facility’s expectations for maintaining resident privacy during personal care.
Failure to Obtain Timely Physician Response for Ongoing Pruritus and Skin Injury
Penalty
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure that a physician supervised and provided consultation or treatment after being contacted regarding a resident with ongoing pruritus and self-inflicted skin injuries. During an interview and observation, the resident reported itching for about three weeks, stated they had requested medication to help, and was observed scratching both arms, which showed deep scratches on the upper and lower arms. The resident’s care plan documented multiple episodes of self-inflicted scratches to the hands and forearm over several weeks, with interventions directing staff to report abnormalities, failure to heal, and signs and symptoms of infection or maceration to the physician. Record review showed that on 3/27/2026 a verbal order was received to restart scheduled Triamcinolone cream to the right arm and left shin daily for 14 days. A skin/wound note dated 4/5/2026 documented that the resident continued to have pruritus to all extremities, with one open area on the left hand and no signs of infection, and that a message was left for the provider questioning the need for systemic medication (cetirizine) to ease the pruritic issue and assist with sleep. A communication note dated 4/11/2026 documented a call to update the physician that there were no changes to the areas on the arms and legs and that the resident continued to scratch and areas remained inflamed, with staff “waiting on updated orders,” but no physician response or new orders were documented. In interviews, an RN and the DON confirmed there had been a delay in physician response despite multiple calls and faxes and that the physician had not yet responded to the request for treatment for this resident’s ongoing scratching and skin issues.
Failure to Complete Required Total Program of Care Reviews
Penalty
Summary
Surveyors identified that physicians failed to complete required total program of care reviews for two residents. One resident with multiple complex diagnoses, including dementia, anxiety, osteoporosis, cachexia, GERD, adult failure to thrive, sacral pressure ulcer, malnutrition, depression, bipolar disorder, and dysphagia, had physician/provider regulatory visit progress notes over a one-year period that did not document a total review of care. At each visit, the physician documented that the resident was taking Vitamin B-12 1000 mcg daily and Diflucan 100 mg daily, even though these medications were not present in the current physician orders. Additionally, nursing progress notes documented the development and treatment of MASD on specific dates, but the physician’s regulatory visit note during that same period did not reflect that the resident was being treated for MASD. Nursing progress notes for the same resident also documented a stage 2 pressure ulcer on the coccyx and bilateral blanchable erythema on the heels, but the corresponding physician/provider regulatory visit note did not document the presence of these wounds or the care needed to treat them. The DON confirmed that the physician had not documented a total review of care for this resident and reported difficulty getting certain providers to complete such reviews. For another resident admitted in January 2025, review of physician/provider notes from admission through the survey date showed no provider visit notes that met the definition of a total program of care review, including a review of all current medications, treatments, and all aspects of the resident’s comprehensive plan of care.
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