Inspection Results » Countrybrook Living Center

  1. Health Inspection on October 19, 2017 [1]

    1. Widespread: No actual harm with potential for more than minimal harm that is not immediate jeopardy
      • Prepare food that is nutritional, appetizing, tasty, attractive, well-cooked, and at the right temperature. (Corrected 2017-12-04)
    2. Isolated: No actual harm with potential for more than minimal harm that is not immediate jeopardy
      • Make sure that special or therapeutic diets are ordered by the attending doctor. (Corrected 2017-12-04)
      • Maintain drug records and properly mark/label drugs and other similar products according to accepted professional standards. (Corrected 2017-12-04)
      • Assist those residents who need help with eating/drinking, grooming and personal and oral hygiene. (Corrected 2017-12-04)
      • Ensure that a nursing home area is free from accident hazards and provide adequate supervision to prevent avoidable accidents. (Corrected 2017-12-04)
      • Develop and implement policies for 1) screening and training employees; and the 2) prevention, identification, investigation, and reporting of any abuse, neglect, mistreatment and misappropriation of property. (Corrected 2017-12-04)
      • Provide care by qualified persons according to each resident's written plan of care. (Corrected 2017-12-04)
      • Have a program that investigates, controls and keeps infection from spreading. (Corrected 2017-12-04)

To be part of the Medicare and Medicaid programs, nursing homes have to meet certain requirements set by Congress. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) has entered into an agreement with state governments to do health inspections and fire safety inspections of these nursing homes and investigate complaints about nursing home care. [2]

About The Inspection Process


References

  1. http://www.medicare.gov/NursingHomeCompare/About/Health-Inspections.html
  2. http://www.medicare.gov/NursingHomeCompare/About/Inspection-Results.html