PLANTSVILLE, CT โ Federal health inspectors identified nine deficiencies at Summit at Plantsville Center for Health & Rehabilitation during a standard health inspection completed on December 8, 2025, including a widespread failure to implement adequate infection prevention and control measures.

Widespread Infection Prevention Breakdown
The inspection documented a deficiency under federal regulatory tag F0880, which requires skilled nursing facilities to provide and implement a comprehensive infection prevention and control program. Inspectors determined the scope of the problem was widespread โ meaning the deficiency was not isolated to a single unit or incident but rather reflected a systemic issue affecting the facility's operations broadly.
The severity was classified at Level F on the federal scoring scale, indicating that while no actual harm to residents was documented at the time of the inspection, there was potential for more than minimal harm. In infection control, this distinction is particularly significant. Infectious outbreaks in congregate care settings can escalate rapidly, and a widespread gap in prevention protocols places every resident at elevated risk.
Infection control programs in nursing homes are required to include hand hygiene protocols, proper use of personal protective equipment, environmental cleaning procedures, surveillance of infections among residents and staff, and antibiotic stewardship practices. When inspectors determine that a facility has failed to provide and implement such a program at a widespread level, it signals that multiple components of the required program were either absent or not functioning as intended.
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, have compromised immune systems, or live with chronic conditions such as diabetes, heart disease, or respiratory illness that reduce the body's ability to fight infection. Residents also live in close quarters, share dining areas, and rely on staff who move between rooms throughout each shift โ all factors that facilitate the transmission of pathogens.
A properly functioning infection control program serves as the primary line of defense against outbreaks of influenza, COVID-19, norovirus, Clostridioides difficile (C. diff), methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), and urinary tract infections. Without consistent implementation of prevention protocols, a single infected individual can trigger a facility-wide outbreak within days.
Federal regulations under 42 CFR ยง483.80 mandate that every Medicare- and Medicaid-certified nursing facility maintain an infection prevention and control program that includes an antibiotic stewardship component. The facility must designate an infection preventionist who works at least part-time and has specialized training. These requirements exist precisely because the consequences of lapses in congregate care environments can be severe and swift.
No Correction Plan on File
Perhaps most concerning is the facility's current response to the citation. As of the inspection record, Summit at Plantsville Center's status is listed as "Deficient, Provider has no plan of correction" for the infection control violation. Facilities that receive deficiency citations are typically required to submit a plan of correction detailing the specific steps they will take to address the problem, a timeline for implementation, and measures to prevent recurrence.
The absence of a submitted correction plan raises questions about the pace at which the facility is moving to address the identified gaps. Until a plan is filed, reviewed, and implemented, the conditions that led to the citation may remain unchanged.
A Broader Pattern of Deficiencies
The infection control citation was one of nine deficiencies identified during the December 2025 inspection. While the full details of all nine citations provide a more complete picture of the facility's compliance status, the volume of deficiencies alone suggests that inspectors found problems across multiple areas of care and operations.
Families with loved ones at Summit at Plantsville Center may wish to review the complete inspection report, which is available through the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Care Compare website. The report includes details on all nine deficiencies, their scope and severity ratings, and the facility's overall compliance history.
Residents and families who have concerns about infection control practices or other aspects of care can contact the Connecticut Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program for assistance and advocacy.
For the full inspection report and deficiency details, visit the [facility's inspection page](/facility/summit-at-plantsville-center-for-health-rehabili/075468) on NursingHomeNews.org.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Summit At Plantsville Center For Health & Rehabili from 2025-12-08 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.