The breakdown at Estherville Community Care Center left the resident vulnerable to pneumococcal disease for months. Federal inspectors found no record the 33-bed facility ever administered the vaccine, even though the resident had explicitly agreed to receive it.

On June 28, the resident electronically signed a pneumococcal vaccine consent form documenting she had been educated about the risks and benefits and gave permission for the vaccination. The form remained the only trace of the vaccine process in her medical record.
When inspectors reviewed her clinical immunization records in September, they found no entry for a pneumonia vaccine. Her Minimum Data Set assessment, a comprehensive evaluation tool used in nursing homes, documented she was not up to date with the pneumonia vaccine and that it was not offered.
The resident scored 15 on the Brief Interview for Mental Status, indicating no cognitive impairment. She was fully capable of understanding and consenting to medical treatments.
Staff struggled to explain the failure when questioned by inspectors. On September 17, the facility's Infection Preventionist told inspectors at 2:34 PM that she could not find anything about the pneumonia vaccine for the resident. The next morning at 10:44, the Director of Nursing offered a different explanation: when staff processed the resident's admission paperwork, they failed to notice she had consented to receive the pneumonia vaccine.
The facility's own written policy on vaccination promised residents would be offered flu, pneumonia, RSV and COVID-19 vaccinations according to CDC and CMS guidelines, based on availability to the community. The policy specifically mentioned pneumococcal vaccines, known as pneumovax.
Pneumococcal disease kills thousands of Americans each year, with adults 65 and older facing the highest risk of serious complications. The CDC recommends pneumococcal vaccination for all adults in this age group because the infection can cause pneumonia, bloodstream infections, and meningitis.
The inspection occurred following a complaint to state health officials. Inspectors classified the violation as causing minimal harm or potential for actual harm, noting it affected few residents. However, the failure to follow through on a resident's explicit medical consent represents a breakdown in basic care coordination.
Federal regulations require nursing homes to develop and implement policies for flu and pneumonia vaccinations. The Estherville facility had the policy in place but failed to execute it for a resident who had already agreed to receive the protection.
The resident's case illustrates how administrative failures can leave vulnerable elderly residents exposed to preventable diseases. Despite signing consent forms and facility policies requiring vaccination offers, she remained unprotected against pneumococcal infection for months while living in a congregate care setting where infectious diseases can spread rapidly.
The facility reported a census of 33 residents during the September inspection. Inspectors reviewed vaccination records for five residents and found the failure affected at least one person, though the scope of similar problems among other residents was not detailed in the inspection report.
The vaccination breakdown occurred despite multiple safeguards designed to protect residents. The facility had established policies, staff had educated the resident about the vaccine, she had provided informed consent, and federal regulations required follow-through. Yet the system failed at the final step of actually administering the vaccine.
The Director of Nursing's explanation that admission staff overlooked the signed consent form suggests the facility lacks adequate procedures for tracking and implementing resident medical decisions. The Infection Preventionist's inability to locate any vaccine records for the resident points to gaps in clinical documentation and monitoring systems.
For the resident who signed the consent form in June, the missed vaccination meant months of unnecessary exposure to a potentially deadly infection. Her cognitive competence made the failure particularly troubling since she had made an informed decision to protect herself but was let down by the facility's execution.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Estherville Community Care Center from 2025-09-25 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.
Additional Resources
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