24th Place Nursing Home: Survey Records Hidden - OK
When a federal inspector visited on September 26, 2025, the information board near the front entrance of the 600 24th Avenue Southwest facility listed exactly where residents, family members, and legal representatives could access the current survey and the past three years of state inspection history: the screening desk. The inspector checked. The binder wasn't there.
Nearly an hour later, the resident council group had a different answer. The past survey results, they said, were kept at the nurses' station.
The administrator retrieved the binder from inside the nurses' station at 4:13 p.m. Then came the admission that followed: residents were not allowed to enter the nurses' station. The administrator acknowledged the binder should have been sitting on the nurses' station counter, where residents could at least reach it from outside.
Ten minutes after that, the administrator disclosed something else. The binder didn't contain the results of the 2024 annual recertification survey at all.
The facility housed 74 residents at the time of the inspection.
What the inspection captured is a gap between what a facility tells people and what it actually provides. The sign promised access. The screening desk had nothing. The actual records were stored in a space residents couldn't enter, and even those records were incomplete, missing the most recent annual review of the facility's compliance with federal standards.
State survey results are among the few tools available to residents and families trying to evaluate the quality of care inside a nursing home. They document what inspectors found during their last visit: whether staff followed proper procedures, whether residents were protected from harm, whether the facility met basic standards of care and safety. The 2024 recertification survey, the one absent from the binder entirely, would have been the most current picture of how 24th Place was performing.
Inspectors classified the violation as causing minimal harm or potential for actual harm, and listed many residents as affected.
The deficiency falls under a federal requirement that nursing homes make survey results readily accessible, not stored behind a counter in a restricted area, not missing from the binder altogether, and not described on a sign as available somewhere they aren't.
There is nothing in the inspection report to indicate the administrator disputed what inspectors found. The acknowledgments came quickly: the binder was in the wrong place, residents couldn't access the space where it was kept, and the most recent survey wasn't included. Whether the 2024 results were ever added to the binder, or when the screening desk was last stocked with anything, the inspection report doesn't say.
For families trying to make decisions about a loved one's care at 24th Place, or for residents trying to understand their own rights inside the facility, the practical effect was the same. The record of how the facility had performed under federal scrutiny was not where it was supposed to be, was not in a place residents could reach, and was not complete.
The inspection was completed October 2, 2025. What the 2024 recertification survey actually showed, and whether residents at 24th Place have ever been able to read it, remains unanswered.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for 24th Place from 2025-10-02 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.
Additional Resources
Data source: Official federal inspection data from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS).
Editorial process: AI-synthesized regulatory data, reviewed for accuracy by our editorial team.
Professional review: All content reviewed by Christopher F. Nesbitt, Sr., NH EMT & BU-trained Paralegal.
Last verified: June 25, 2026 · Our methodology
24th Place in Norman, OK was cited for violations during a health inspection on October 2, 2025.
Nearly an hour later, the resident council group had a different answer.
Health inspections identify deficiencies that facilities must correct. Violations range from minor documentation issues to serious safety concerns. Review the full report below for specific details and facility response.