LOGAN, KS — Federal health inspectors identified 10 deficiencies at Logan Manor Community Health Services during a standard health inspection completed on December 3, 2025, including a failure to maintain accident-free environments and provide adequate resident supervision.

Accident Hazards and Supervision Gaps
Among the deficiencies documented, inspectors cited Logan Manor under regulatory tag F0689, which requires nursing facilities to keep residential areas free from accident hazards and to provide supervision sufficient to prevent accidents.
The citation carried a Scope/Severity Level D rating, meaning the deficiency was isolated in nature and no actual harm to residents was documented at the time of inspection. However, inspectors determined there was potential for more than minimal harm — a designation that signals real risk to resident safety if conditions remain unaddressed.
Falls and environmental hazards represent one of the most significant threats to nursing home residents. According to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, falls are the leading cause of injury among adults aged 65 and older, and nursing home residents face elevated risk due to mobility limitations, cognitive impairment, and medication side effects. When a facility fails to identify and eliminate environmental hazards — wet floors, cluttered walkways, poor lighting, unsecured furniture — the likelihood of preventable injuries rises substantially.
Adequate supervision is equally critical. Residents with dementia, balance disorders, or a history of previous falls require individualized monitoring. Without it, a single unwitnessed fall can result in hip fractures, head trauma, or other injuries that dramatically reduce quality of life and increase mortality risk in older adults.
Ten Total Deficiencies
The accident hazard citation was one of 10 deficiencies identified during the inspection. While the full scope of all citations has not been detailed in public summaries, a facility accumulating 10 deficiencies in a single survey cycle raises questions about the consistency of care delivery and internal quality assurance processes.
For context, the national average for deficiencies per nursing home inspection is approximately 7 to 8 citations. Ten deficiencies places Logan Manor above that threshold, though the severity level of each individual finding is an important factor in assessing overall risk to residents.
Facilities that receive multiple citations across different care categories — from infection control to medication management to resident rights — often face underlying systemic issues. Staffing shortages, inadequate training, and poor administrative oversight are common contributing factors when deficiencies span multiple regulatory areas.
No Correction Plan on File
Perhaps the most consequential detail in Logan Manor's inspection record is the facility's failure to submit a plan of correction. Federal regulations require that cited facilities respond with specific, measurable steps they will take to address each deficiency and prevent recurrence.
A plan of correction typically must include what corrective action the facility will take, how it will identify other residents who may be affected, what systemic changes will be implemented, and how the facility will monitor ongoing compliance. The absence of such a plan means there is no documented commitment from Logan Manor to resolve the identified problems.
When a provider does not submit a correction plan, the state survey agency and the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) may pursue escalating enforcement actions. These can range from directed plans of correction imposed by regulators, to civil monetary penalties, to — in the most serious cases — termination from participation in the Medicare and Medicaid programs.
What Residents and Families Should Know
Families with loved ones at Logan Manor should be aware that inspection results are public record and available through the CMS Care Compare website. Reviewing a facility's full inspection history can provide a clearer picture of whether deficiencies represent isolated lapses or recurring patterns.
Key steps families can take include requesting to see the facility's most recent inspection report, asking administrators directly about the status of correction plans, and contacting the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services with concerns about resident safety.
The full inspection report for Logan Manor Community Health Services contains additional details about all 10 deficiencies cited during the December 2025 survey and is available through federal and state regulatory databases.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Logan Manor Community Health Services from 2025-12-03 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.