BELINGTON, WV — Federal health inspectors identified 10 deficiencies at Tygart Valley Health & Rehabilitation during a complaint investigation conducted on November 20, 2025, including a citation for failing to provide and implement an adequate infection prevention and control program.

Infection Prevention Program Found Deficient
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) cited the Belington facility under regulatory tag F0880, which requires nursing homes to maintain a comprehensive infection prevention and control program. Inspectors determined the deficiency represented a Level E severity — indicating a pattern of noncompliance that, while not yet resulting in documented harm, carried the potential for more than minimal harm to residents.
A Level E designation is significant because it signals that the problem was not an isolated incident. Rather, inspectors observed a recurring pattern of infection control lapses throughout the facility. This classification sits in the middle of CMS's severity scale, above isolated incidents but below findings involving actual harm or immediate jeopardy to resident safety.
Infection prevention programs in long-term care facilities are required to include protocols for hand hygiene, proper use of personal protective equipment, environmental cleaning and disinfection, management of infectious residents, and surveillance systems to detect and respond to outbreaks. When these systems break down in a pattern, every resident in the facility faces elevated risk.
Why Infection Control Is Critical in Nursing Homes
Nursing home residents are among the most vulnerable populations when it comes to infectious disease. Many residents are elderly, immunocompromised, or living with chronic conditions such as diabetes, heart disease, or respiratory illness that reduce the body's ability to fight infection.
Healthcare-associated infections are a leading cause of illness and death in long-term care settings. According to the CDC, on any given day, approximately 1 in 25 hospital patients has at least one healthcare-associated infection, and rates in nursing homes can be even higher due to the congregate living environment and the frequency of shared spaces, equipment, and caregiving staff.
Common infections in nursing facilities include urinary tract infections, respiratory infections, skin and soft tissue infections, and gastrointestinal illness. When infection control programs are inadequate, these conditions can spread rapidly through a facility, particularly among residents with weakened immune systems.
Proper infection prevention protocols should include regular staff training, documented hand hygiene compliance monitoring, isolation procedures for symptomatic residents, and routine environmental cleaning schedules. Facilities are also expected to designate an infection preventionist — a trained staff member responsible for overseeing the program and conducting ongoing surveillance.
Part of a Broader Pattern of Deficiencies
The infection control citation was one of 10 total deficiencies identified during the November inspection. While the full scope of all cited violations provides a more complete picture of the facility's compliance status, the presence of 10 findings during a single complaint investigation suggests areas of operational concern across multiple departments.
Complaint investigations differ from routine annual surveys in that they are typically triggered by specific reports of potential problems — often filed by residents, family members, or staff. The fact that inspectors found 10 deficiencies during such an investigation indicates that the reported concerns led to a broader examination of facility practices.
Correction Timeline and Current Status
Tygart Valley Health & Rehabilitation has acknowledged the deficiency and reported a correction date of December 12, 2025 — approximately three weeks after the inspection. The facility's status is listed as "deficient, provider has date of correction," meaning the facility has committed to addressing the identified issues but the correction has not yet been independently verified by follow-up inspection.
CMS typically requires facilities to submit a plan of correction detailing the specific steps taken to address each deficiency, the staff responsible for implementation, and the monitoring systems put in place to prevent recurrence. Facilities that fail to achieve and maintain compliance may face additional enforcement actions, including civil monetary penalties, denial of payment for new admissions, or in serious cases, termination from Medicare and Medicaid programs.
Residents and family members can view the complete inspection findings for Tygart Valley Health & Rehabilitation, including all 10 cited deficiencies, through the full inspection report available on this site.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Tygart Valley Health & Rehabilitation from 2025-11-20 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.