LAS VEGAS, NV - Federal health inspectors identified six deficiencies at Marquis Plaza Regency Post Acute Rehab following a complaint investigation completed on September 12, 2025, including a citation for failing to adequately assist residents with basic activities of daily living.

Facility Failed to Provide Required Daily Living Assistance
The inspection, triggered by a formal complaint, found that Marquis Plaza Regency did not consistently provide care and assistance to residents who were unable to independently perform activities of daily living (ADLs). These fundamental care tasks include bathing, dressing, grooming, toileting, eating, and mobility — functions that nursing home residents often depend entirely on staff to complete.
The deficiency was cited under federal regulatory tag F0677, which requires skilled nursing facilities to ensure that residents receive the help they need to carry out daily activities when they cannot do so on their own. The citation carried a Scope/Severity Level D, indicating an isolated incident where no actual harm was documented but where inspectors determined there was potential for more than minimal harm.
This distinction is significant. While the facility avoided a finding of direct resident harm, the level D classification means inspectors concluded the gap in care could have led to meaningful negative outcomes for affected residents.
Why Activities of Daily Living Matter in Skilled Nursing
Activities of daily living form the foundation of nursing home care. When residents cannot independently bathe, dress, use the restroom, or feed themselves, they rely on facility staff to meet those needs consistently and with dignity. Failures in ADL assistance can set off a chain of medical consequences that extend well beyond the immediate missed care event.
A resident who does not receive timely toileting assistance faces increased risk of skin breakdown, urinary tract infections, and falls — particularly if they attempt to reach a restroom without help. Inadequate bathing and grooming can contribute to skin infections and pressure ulcer development, especially in residents with limited mobility. Missed assistance with eating can lead to malnutrition, dehydration, and aspiration if residents struggle to manage food and fluids without proper support.
Under federal standards established by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), nursing facilities must assess each resident's functional capabilities upon admission and develop an individualized care plan that specifies exactly what level of ADL assistance is required. Staff must then deliver that care consistently across all shifts.
Six Total Deficiencies Identified
The ADL assistance failure was one of six deficiencies documented during the September 2025 inspection. The investigation was initiated in response to a complaint filed against the facility, indicating that concerns about care quality had been raised before inspectors arrived.
The citation fell under the broader category of Quality of Life and Care Deficiencies, a classification that encompasses failures in the basic standards residents and their families expect when entrusting care to a skilled nursing facility.
Correction Timeline and Facility Response
Following the inspection findings, Marquis Plaza Regency was classified as deficient with a required correction plan. The facility reported that corrections were implemented as of October 20, 2025, approximately five weeks after the inspection date.
Federal regulations require facilities to submit a plan of correction that details the specific steps taken to address each deficiency, the measures put in place to prevent recurrence, and how the facility will monitor ongoing compliance. CMS and state survey agencies may conduct follow-up inspections to verify that corrective actions have been properly implemented.
What Families Should Know
For families with loved ones at Marquis Plaza Regency or those considering placement at the facility, this inspection record provides important context. A complaint-initiated investigation resulting in six deficiencies suggests patterns that warrant attention.
Families should review the facility's complete inspection history, which is publicly available through the CMS Care Compare tool at medicare.gov. Key indicators to monitor include the total number of deficiencies over time, whether similar citations have recurred, staffing levels relative to resident census, and the facility's overall star rating.
Residents and family members who observe gaps in daily care — missed meals, delayed toileting, infrequent bathing, or lack of grooming assistance — should document those observations and report concerns to the facility's director of nursing, the Nevada Bureau of Health Care Quality and Compliance, or the state's long-term care ombudsman program.
The full inspection report for Marquis Plaza Regency Post Acute Rehab is available through the CMS Care Compare database for those seeking additional details on all six deficiencies cited during the September 2025 investigation.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Marquis Plaza Regency Post Acute Rehab from 2025-09-12 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.
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