Health Center at the Renaissance: Abuse Not Reported - OH
That is what federal inspectors found when they investigated a complaint at Health Center at the Renaissance, a nursing home at 26376 John Rd in Olmsted Township. The inspection, completed October 6, 2025, documented a single but significant failure: the facility knew about an allegation of abuse and did not report it to the state.
The administrator confirmed it directly. CNA #718 and LPN #894 were no longer employed at the facility. The alleged abuse incident had not been reported to the State Survey Agency. The administrator confirmed and verified those findings during the inspection interview.
What the inspection report does not say is what happened to the resident at the center of the complaint. It does not name them, describe what was alleged, or explain what the CNA and LPN were accused of doing. What it does say is that the facility had a policy, the facility knew about the allegation, and the facility did not follow the policy.
The abuse, neglect, misappropriation, and exploitation policy at Health Center at the Renaissance was last revised in November 2016. It stated that all residents had a right to be free from abuse, neglect, misappropriation of resident property, and exploitation, including corporal punishment, involuntary seclusion, and any physical or chemical restraint not required to treat a resident's medical symptoms. It also stated that alleged violations would be reported to the State Survey Agency.
The facility did not do that.
Inspectors cited the deficiency under F0600, the federal tag covering abuse prohibition, and classified the level of harm as minimal harm or potential for actual harm. The number of residents affected was listed as few.
The training timeline is worth reading closely. Sensitivity care training for all staff was held on June 16, July 14, and August 11 of 2025, approximately three months after the incident occurred. New hire orientation covering abuse policy and protocols was documented on September 25, 2025. A broader staff education session on abuse, neglect, and exploitation took place September 1, 2025.
None of that training happened before the alleged incident. All of it came after.
There is a version of this sequence that a facility might describe as a corrective response, a recognition that something went wrong and a commitment to doing better. But the training schedule also means that whatever happened to the resident happened in an environment where staff had not yet received that education, and the state agency that oversees nursing home compliance did not learn about the incident through the facility's own reporting. It learned about it through a complaint.
The complaint number assigned to this investigation is 1374287, filed under Ohio identifier OH00164161.
The two employees at the center of the allegation, CNA #718 and LPN #894, are gone. Whether they resigned, were terminated, or left for other reasons is not stated in the inspection report. Whether any other action was taken regarding their conduct, whether any referral was made to a licensing board or law enforcement, is also not addressed in the documents reviewed.
What is addressed is the gap between the facility's written commitments and its actual conduct. The policy said report it. The facility did not report it. The administrator, when confronted with that gap during the inspection, confirmed it was true.
Nursing homes are required to report allegations of abuse to state agencies because the state is the oversight mechanism. When a facility absorbs an allegation internally, handles it through its own processes, and never notifies the agency responsible for investigating such complaints, the state has no way to determine whether the response was adequate, whether the resident was protected, or whether the staff members involved posed a risk to other residents.
In this case, the state found out because someone filed a complaint. The facility's own reporting system did not work.
Health Center at the Renaissance received a deficiency citation with a harm level of minimal harm or potential for actual harm. That language, drawn from CMS inspection classification, reflects what inspectors assessed about the outcome for the resident or residents involved. It does not mean nothing happened. It means inspectors could not document that serious harm resulted, or that the potential for harm reached the level that would trigger an immediate jeopardy citation.
The resident at the center of the complaint, the person whose experience generated a complaint number and a federal inspection and a citation, is not described in the portion of the inspection report available for review. Their name does not appear. What they experienced is not detailed. Whether they are still living at the facility is unknown.
The facility's plan of correction is not included in the inspection documents reviewed. For information on how Health Center at the Renaissance intends to address the deficiency, CMS directs the public to contact the nursing home or the Ohio state survey agency directly.
What the record shows is a facility that had a policy it did not follow, two employees who are no longer there, training that arrived months too late, and a state agency that learned about an abuse allegation not from the nursing home, but from whoever picked up the phone and filed a complaint.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Health Center At the Renaissance from 2025-10-06 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 26, 2026 · Our methodology
HEALTH CENTER AT THE RENAISSANCE in OLMSTED TWP, OH was cited for abuse-related violations during a health inspection on October 6, 2025.
The administrator confirmed it directly.
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.