PHILADELPHIA, MS - Federal health inspectors identified nine deficiencies at Neshoba County Nursing Home during a standard health inspection completed on November 18, 2025, including a notable citation for failing to develop and implement comprehensive care plans that meet residents' needs.

Incomplete Care Plans Put Residents at Risk
Among the deficiencies documented, inspectors flagged the facility under federal regulatory tag F0656, which falls under the category of Resident Assessment and Care Planning Deficiencies. The citation specifically addressed the nursing home's failure to develop and implement complete care plans with measurable goals and timetables for its residents.
A care plan in a skilled nursing facility serves as the foundational document guiding every aspect of a resident's daily treatment. It outlines specific medical needs, therapeutic interventions, nutritional requirements, mobility goals, and personal preferences. When a care plan is incomplete or lacks measurable objectives, clinical staff have no reliable framework for delivering consistent, individualized care.
The deficiency was classified at Scope/Severity Level D, meaning it was isolated in nature and did not result in documented actual harm. However, inspectors determined there was potential for more than minimal harm to residents, a designation that signals the gap between what occurred and what could have resulted was significant enough to warrant formal citation.
Why Measurable Care Plans Matter
Federal regulations under the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) require that every nursing home resident have a comprehensive, individualized care plan developed within seven days of completing an initial assessment. These plans must be reviewed and updated quarterly or whenever a resident's condition changes.
A complete care plan includes several critical components: clearly identified problems or needs, specific and measurable goals with realistic timetables, the interventions staff must carry out, and the disciplines responsible for each action. When any of these elements is missing, the risk of adverse outcomes increases substantially.
For example, a resident recovering from a hip fracture needs a care plan that specifies physical therapy frequency, pain management protocols, fall prevention measures, and mobility milestones with target dates. Without those details documented and tracked, therapy could be inconsistent, pain could go unmanaged, and fall risks could go unaddressed.
Incomplete care planning has been linked in clinical research to higher rates of preventable hospital readmissions, medication errors, pressure injuries, and functional decline among nursing home residents. The care plan functions as a communication tool across nursing shifts, ensuring continuity regardless of which staff members are on duty.
Nine Total Deficiencies Signal Broader Concerns
The care plan citation was one of nine total deficiencies identified during the inspection. While individual citations at Level D severity represent isolated findings, the cumulative number of deficiencies across a single inspection can indicate broader systemic issues with compliance, staffing, or administrative oversight.
Facilities with multiple deficiencies are typically placed under increased scrutiny by state and federal regulators. Follow-up inspections may be scheduled to verify that corrective actions have been implemented and sustained.
According to CMS data, the national average number of health deficiencies per nursing home inspection is approximately seven to eight. Neshoba County Nursing Home's nine citations place it slightly above that benchmark.
Facility Reports Corrections
Neshoba County Nursing Home reported that corrections were made as of December 13, 2025, approximately 25 days after the inspection. The facility's status is listed as "Deficient, Provider has date of correction," meaning the nursing home has submitted a plan of correction to regulators but the fixes may still require verification through a follow-up survey.
A plan of correction typically requires the facility to outline what steps were taken to address each specific deficiency, how affected residents were identified and protected, what systemic changes were made to prevent recurrence, and how the facility will monitor ongoing compliance.
What Families Should Know
Families with loved ones at Neshoba County Nursing Home or any skilled nursing facility should request access to their family member's current care plan. Federal law guarantees residents and their representatives the right to review and participate in care planning decisions.
Residents who believe their care plan does not accurately reflect their needs or who observe inconsistencies in the care being delivered can file a complaint with the Mississippi State Department of Health or contact the state's Long-Term Care Ombudsman program.
The full inspection report, including details on all nine deficiencies, is available through the CMS Care Compare website. Readers can visit NursingHomeNews.org's [full inspection report page](/facility/neshoba-county-nursing-home) for additional details and historical compliance data.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Neshoba County Nursing Home from 2025-11-18 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.
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