BERLIN, PA - Federal health inspectors found that Meadow View Nursing Center failed to correct previously identified deficiencies in resident assessments, raising questions about the facility's internal quality controls and the accuracy of care planning for its residents.

Prior Citation Left Unresolved
During a survey completed on February 7, 2025, inspectors determined that the facility's Quality Assurance and Performance Improvement (QAPI) committee was ineffective in correcting deficient practices related to accurate Minimum Data Set (MDS) assessments. The finding was cited under F641, a federal regulatory tag that addresses the accuracy and completeness of resident assessments.
The problem was not new. Meadow View had been cited during a previous survey ending March 7, 2024, for failing to update residents' care plans. At that time, the facility submitted a plan of correction that included conducting regular audits and reporting audit results to the QAPI committee for review. However, the February 2025 inspection revealed that those corrective measures had not produced the intended results, and the same category of deficiency persisted.
Why MDS Accuracy Matters for Residents
The Minimum Data Set is a standardized assessment tool used in all Medicare- and Medicaid-certified nursing homes across the United States. It captures detailed information about each resident's functional abilities, health conditions, and care needs. Accurate MDS assessments are foundational to developing individualized care plans that guide daily nursing decisions.
When MDS assessments contain errors or are not updated to reflect changes in a resident's condition, the consequences can be significant. Inaccurate assessments can lead to inappropriate staffing levels, missed changes in cognitive or physical status, and care plans that do not address a resident's actual needs. For example, if a resident's mobility has declined but the MDS still reflects a higher functional level, staff may not provide adequate fall prevention measures or assistance with daily activities.
MDS data also determines Medicare reimbursement rates. Inaccurate coding can result in either underfunding — meaning the facility may lack resources to provide appropriate care — or overfunding, which constitutes a billing concern. In either scenario, residents bear the consequences.
QAPI Committee Effectiveness Under Scrutiny
Federal regulations require every nursing facility to maintain a QAPI program that identifies and corrects quality deficiencies on an ongoing basis. The QAPI committee is expected to analyze data from audits, incident reports, and survey findings to implement sustainable improvements.
At Meadow View, inspectors found that the QAPI committee's oversight of MDS accuracy was not producing measurable improvement. Despite the facility's written commitment to auditing and reporting, the recurrence of the same deficiency category within approximately 11 months indicated that the corrective action plan was either insufficiently implemented or fundamentally inadequate.
According to federal guidelines from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), an effective QAPI program should include clearly defined performance indicators, regular monitoring with documented outcomes, and accountability structures that ensure corrective actions are sustained over time. A facility that is re-cited for a previously identified deficiency demonstrates a breakdown in at least one of these components.
Industry Standards and Expectations
Best practices in long-term care call for MDS coordinators to receive ongoing training and for interdisciplinary teams to participate in care plan reviews. Facilities are expected to conduct internal audits not as a formality but as a genuine mechanism for identifying gaps in documentation and clinical practice.
When a corrective action plan fails to resolve a deficiency, CMS guidance indicates that the facility should reassess its approach, identify root causes, and implement more targeted interventions. Repeated citations for similar issues can result in escalating enforcement actions, including civil monetary penalties, denial of payment for new admissions, or, in persistent cases, termination from the Medicare and Medicaid programs.
What Comes Next
Meadow View Nursing Center will be required to submit a new plan of correction addressing the February 2025 findings. The facility must demonstrate to state and federal regulators that its QAPI program can effectively identify assessment inaccuracies and implement lasting corrections.
Families of current and prospective residents can review the facility's full inspection history, including deficiency details and scope-and-severity ratings, through the CMS Care Compare website or by requesting records directly from the facility.
The complete inspection report contains additional details about the findings at Meadow View Nursing Center.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Meadow View Nursing Center from 2025-02-07 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.
💬 Join the Discussion
Comments are moderated. Please keep discussions respectful and relevant to nursing home care quality.