TACOMA, WA - Federal health inspectors identified 11 deficiencies at Avamere Transitional Care of Puget Sound during a standard health inspection completed on November 25, 2025, including violations related to the facility's failure to meet residents' nutritional needs through proper menu planning and dietary oversight.

Nutritional Menu Planning Violations
Among the deficiencies cited under regulatory tag F0803, inspectors found that the facility failed to ensure menus met the nutritional needs of its residents. Federal regulations require that nursing home menus be prepared in advance, followed as written, regularly updated, and reviewed by a qualified dietician to confirm they address the dietary requirements of each resident.
The deficiency was classified at Scope/Severity Level C, indicating a pattern of noncompliance rather than an isolated incident. While inspectors did not document actual harm to residents, they determined there was potential for more than minimal harm — a designation that signals the problem could lead to negative health outcomes if left unaddressed.
Proper nutrition is a foundational element of care in skilled nursing facilities. Residents in transitional care settings are often recovering from surgery, illness, or injury, and their dietary needs can be highly specific. A resident recovering from a hip fracture, for example, requires adequate protein and calcium intake to support bone healing. A resident managing diabetes needs carefully controlled carbohydrate portions. When menus are not tailored, reviewed, and followed, these clinical needs go unmet.
Why Dietician Review Matters
The federal requirement for dietician review of nursing home menus exists because nutritional planning in a clinical setting is fundamentally different from general meal preparation. A registered dietician evaluates menus not just for caloric content but for therapeutic appropriateness — ensuring that texture modifications for residents with swallowing difficulties are incorporated, that sodium restrictions for residents with heart failure are maintained, and that nutrient density is sufficient for residents with diminished appetites.
When this review process breaks down, the consequences can compound over time. Malnutrition in nursing home residents is associated with increased rates of pressure injuries, slower wound healing, weakened immune response, and higher rates of hospital readmission. According to clinical research, malnourished nursing home residents face a significantly elevated risk of mortality compared to those receiving adequate nutrition.
The pattern-level finding at Avamere suggests this was not a one-time oversight but rather a systemic gap in the facility's dietary operations, affecting the broader resident population.
Facility Response and Correction Timeline
The facility reported a correction date of October 30, 2025 — notably before the November 25 inspection date. This timeline suggests that the facility may have identified and begun addressing the issue prior to the formal inspection, though inspectors still documented the deficiency during their review.
Avamere Transitional Care of Puget Sound was listed as "Deficient, Provider has date of correction," meaning the facility has acknowledged the problem and committed to a remediation plan. Federal regulators will typically conduct follow-up reviews to verify that corrections have been fully implemented and sustained.
Broader Context: 11 Total Deficiencies
The nutritional menu violation was one of 11 total deficiencies identified during the inspection. While the full scope of all cited violations provides a more complete picture of the facility's compliance status, the volume of deficiencies in a single inspection cycle is notable. Federal nursing home inspections evaluate hundreds of regulatory requirements across categories including resident rights, quality of care, infection control, pharmacy services, and environmental safety.
A facility receiving 11 citations in one survey may be experiencing operational challenges across multiple departments. Families and prospective residents can review the complete inspection results, including all 11 deficiencies, through the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Care Compare tool at medicare.gov.
What Families Should Know
For current and prospective residents of Avamere Transitional Care of Puget Sound, the inspection results underscore the importance of asking specific questions about dietary care. Families should inquire whether a registered dietician actively reviews menus, how often nutritional assessments are conducted for individual residents, and what process exists for accommodating special dietary needs or preferences.
Residents and their advocates have the right to review inspection reports and to raise concerns with the facility's administration or with the Washington State Department of Social and Health Services, which oversees nursing home licensing and complaint investigations in the state.
The full federal inspection report for Avamere Transitional Care of Puget Sound is available for public review and contains detailed findings for all 11 cited deficiencies.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Avamere Transitional Care of Puget Sound from 2025-11-25 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.
💬 Join the Discussion
Comments are moderated. Please keep discussions respectful and relevant to nursing home care quality.