Bethany Home Sioux Falls Failed to Follow Treatment Orders, Federal Inspection Finds

SIOUX FALLS, SD - Federal health inspectors documented significant lapses in treatment and care delivery at Bethany Home Sioux Falls following a complaint investigation conducted in late October 2025.
The facility received a deficiency citation under federal regulatory tag F0684 for failing to provide appropriate treatment and care according to physician orders, resident preferences, and established care goals. While inspectors found no actual harm occurred, they determined the violations created potential for more than minimal harm to residents.
Treatment Order Compliance Failures
The inspection revealed breakdowns in the facility's systems for implementing physician-ordered treatments and following established care plans. When healthcare providers issue treatment orders for nursing home residents, facilities are legally required to carry out those instructions precisely as written unless medical conditions change and new orders are obtained.
Treatment orders typically include specific medications, therapies, dietary requirements, positioning schedules, wound care protocols, and other interventions designed to maintain or improve resident health. Failure to follow these orders can result in deteriorating conditions, delayed healing, medication errors, or preventable complications.
Federal regulations require nursing facilities to ensure each resident receives treatment and care in accordance with professional standards of quality. This includes not only following physician orders but also respecting resident preferences and working toward individualized care goals established in each person's comprehensive care plan.
Medical Implications of Non-Compliance
When facilities fail to provide ordered treatments, residents face multiple risks depending on the specific care involved. Missed medications can lead to uncontrolled chronic conditions, pain, or disease progression. Skipped physical therapy sessions may result in decreased mobility and increased fall risk. Failure to follow wound care protocols can cause infections or delayed healing.
The "potential for more than minimal harm" designation indicates inspectors identified circumstances where these lapses could have led to significant negative outcomes, even though no documented harm occurred during the inspection period. This severity level suggests the violations involved more than minor deviations from care standards.
Care Plan Integration Requirements
Modern nursing home care operates on an interdisciplinary model where physicians, nurses, therapists, dietitians, and other professionals collaborate to develop comprehensive care plans tailored to each resident's needs. These plans incorporate physician orders, resident preferences about daily routines and activities, and specific health goals.
Facilities must have systems in place to ensure all staff members understand and implement each resident's care plan consistently across all shifts. This requires effective communication, proper documentation, ongoing staff training, and regular monitoring to verify that ordered care is actually being delivered.
When breakdowns occur in these systems, residents may receive inconsistent care, experience setbacks in their health conditions, or face unnecessary risks. The failure to honor resident preferences also violates federal requirements that facilities support each person's dignity and autonomy.
Regulatory Response and Correction
Inspectors classified this deficiency at Scope/Severity Level D, indicating an isolated incident rather than a widespread pattern affecting multiple residents. The complaint investigation focused on specific allegations rather than a comprehensive facility survey.
The facility's correction status is listed as "Past Non-Compliance," meaning Bethany Home Sioux Falls has since addressed the identified issues and demonstrated compliance with federal standards. Facilities typically must submit correction plans showing how they identified the root causes of deficiencies and what measures they implemented to prevent recurrence.
Federal regulations require nursing homes to maintain continuous compliance with all standards, not just achieve compliance during inspection visits. Ongoing monitoring, quality assurance programs, and staff education help facilities sustain proper treatment delivery and care planning processes.
Inspection Access and Transparency
The complete inspection report, including specific findings and the facility's correction plan, is available through Medicare's Nursing Home Compare website at medicare.gov/care-compare. Families researching nursing home options can review inspection histories, staffing levels, quality measures, and other performance data for all Medicare and Medicaid certified facilities nationwide.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Bethany Home Sioux Falls from 2025-10-29 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.
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