BROOKHAVEN, MS - Federal health inspectors found Diversicare of Brookhaven deficient in accommodating resident needs and preferences following a complaint investigation completed on November 18, 2025. The facility received three total deficiencies during the inspection, including a citation under regulatory tag F0558 for resident rights violations.

Complaint Investigation Reveals Accommodation Failures
The federal complaint investigation determined that Diversicare of Brookhaven failed to reasonably accommodate the needs and preferences of residents. This requirement, codified under F-tag F0558, is a fundamental component of federal nursing home regulations designed to ensure that long-term care facilities treat residents as individuals with unique needs rather than applying a one-size-fits-all approach to care.
The deficiency was classified at Scope/Severity Level D, indicating an isolated incident where no actual harm was documented but investigators identified the potential for more than minimal harm. This classification means that while no resident experienced direct injury from the failure, the conditions present could have led to negative health outcomes if left unaddressed.
Federal regulations require nursing homes to make reasonable accommodations for each resident's individual needs. This includes preferences related to daily routines, meal choices, sleeping schedules, room temperatures, and personal care practices. When facilities fail to meet this standard, residents may experience diminished quality of life, increased anxiety, and a loss of autonomy that can contribute to physical and psychological decline.
What Federal Standards Require
Under the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) guidelines, nursing homes participating in federal funding programs must demonstrate that they respect and accommodate individual resident preferences to the greatest extent possible. The F0558 regulatory tag specifically addresses a facility's obligation to adjust its practices, schedules, and environment to align with what residents need and prefer.
Accommodation requirements encompass a broad range of daily living factors. Facilities are expected to offer flexibility in wake and sleep times, bathing schedules, meal preferences, room arrangement, and social activities. When a resident expresses a preference or need, staff members are required to document the request and make reasonable efforts to fulfill it.
The standard recognizes that institutional settings inherently limit individual choice, but it establishes a baseline expectation that facilities will not impose unnecessary rigidity on residents. Failure to meet this standard can erode the dignity and independence that federal law guarantees to every nursing home resident.
Health Implications of Accommodation Failures
When nursing homes do not accommodate resident preferences, the consequences extend beyond simple inconvenience. Loss of personal autonomy is associated with increased rates of depression among long-term care residents. Studies in geriatric medicine have consistently shown that residents who maintain control over daily decisions experience better cognitive function, improved mood, and greater engagement with their care plans.
Disrupted sleep schedules imposed by rigid institutional routines can lead to sleep deprivation, which in elderly populations is linked to increased fall risk, weakened immune response, and accelerated cognitive decline. Similarly, failure to accommodate dietary preferences can result in reduced food intake, leading to malnutrition and unintended weight loss.
The potential for more than minimal harm identified by inspectors reflects these well-documented risks. Even in the absence of immediate injury, systemic failures to accommodate residents create conditions where adverse outcomes become more likely over time.
Facility Response and Correction
Diversicare of Brookhaven reported correcting the identified deficiency by November 21, 2025, three days after the inspection concluded. The facility's correction status is listed as "Deficient, Provider has date of correction," indicating that the facility acknowledged the problem and submitted a plan to address it.
The three deficiencies cited during this inspection suggest a pattern that warranted the original complaint. Complaint-driven investigations are initiated when CMS receives reports of potential violations, meaning that concerns about care at the facility were serious enough to trigger a formal federal review.
Nursing home residents and their families can review the full inspection findings through the CMS Care Compare database, which provides detailed records of all cited deficiencies, correction timelines, and historical performance data for every Medicare- and Medicaid-certified facility in the United States.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Diversicare of Brookhaven from 2025-11-18 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.
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