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La Hacienda De Paz: Lab Test Failures - TX

EAGLE PASS, TX — Federal health inspectors identified 12 separate deficiencies at La Hacienda De Paz Rehabilitation and Care Center during a standard health inspection completed on December 10, 2025, including a failure to obtain and report laboratory test results as ordered by physicians. The facility has not submitted a plan of correction for the cited violations.

La Hacienda De Paz Rehabilitation and Care Center facility inspection

Failure to Complete and Report Lab Work

Among the deficiencies documented at the Eagle Pass facility, inspectors flagged a violation under federal regulatory tag F0773, which requires nursing homes to provide or obtain laboratory tests and services when ordered by a practitioner and to promptly communicate results back to the ordering physician.

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The deficiency was classified at Scope/Severity Level D, indicating an isolated incident where no actual harm occurred but where there was potential for more than minimal harm to residents. While this may sound minor in isolation, delayed or missing lab results can set off a chain of medical consequences that compound over time.

When a physician orders blood work, urinalysis, or other diagnostic testing for a nursing home resident, there is typically a clinical reason driving that decision. The practitioner may be monitoring kidney function, checking medication levels in the bloodstream, screening for infection, or tracking chronic conditions such as diabetes. When those results are not obtained — or when they are obtained but not communicated back to the ordering physician — the entire purpose of the diagnostic order is defeated.

Why Timely Lab Results Matter

Laboratory testing serves as an early warning system in clinical care. For elderly residents in long-term care facilities, lab work is frequently the only way to detect dangerous changes before symptoms become visible. Abnormal potassium levels, for instance, can cause fatal cardiac arrhythmias if not identified and treated. Elevated white blood cell counts may signal an infection that requires immediate antibiotic intervention. Rising creatinine levels can indicate kidney failure that demands medication adjustments.

When lab results go unreported, physicians lose the ability to make timely clinical decisions. A resident whose blood thinner levels are dangerously elevated, for example, faces increased risk of internal bleeding with every hour that passes without dosage adjustment. Standard medical protocol requires that critical lab values be reported to the ordering practitioner immediately — often within one hour — and that routine results be communicated within a defined timeframe established by the facility's own policies.

The federal requirement under F0773 exists precisely because nursing home residents cannot advocate for their own lab work. They depend entirely on facility staff to draw specimens, send them to the laboratory, receive results, and relay those findings to their doctors. A breakdown at any point in this process leaves residents medically vulnerable.

12 Total Deficiencies Raise Broader Concerns

The lab reporting failure was just one of 12 deficiencies documented during the December inspection. While the full scope of all cited violations spans multiple areas of facility operations, the volume of deficiencies identified in a single survey raises questions about the overall quality of administrative oversight and clinical care at the facility.

A nursing home receiving 12 citations in one inspection cycle is notable. According to federal data, the national average is approximately 7 to 8 deficiencies per standard health inspection. A count of 12 places La Hacienda De Paz above that benchmark and suggests systemic patterns rather than isolated lapses.

No Correction Plan Filed

Perhaps most concerning is the facility's current correction status. Federal records indicate that La Hacienda De Paz Rehabilitation and Care Center is listed as "Deficient, Provider has no plan of correction" for the cited violations. Under federal regulations, facilities are typically required to submit an acceptable plan of correction outlining how they will address each deficiency and prevent recurrence. The absence of such a plan means there is no documented commitment to resolving the identified problems.

What Residents and Families Should Know

Families with loved ones at La Hacienda De Paz Rehabilitation and Care Center may want to review the full inspection report, which details all 12 deficiencies cited during the December 2025 survey. Inspection reports are publicly available through the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) and can be accessed on the Medicare Care Compare website.

Residents and their families have the right to ask facility administrators directly about what steps are being taken to address inspection findings and to request information about how laboratory orders and results are being managed for their family member's care.

Full Inspection Report

The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for La Hacienda De Paz Rehabilitation and Care Center from 2025-12-10 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.

Additional Resources

🏥 Editorial Standards & Professional Oversight

Data Source: This report is based on official federal inspection data from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS).

Editorial Process: Content generated using AI (Claude) to synthesize complex regulatory data, then reviewed and verified for accuracy by our editorial team.

Professional Review: All content undergoes standards and compliance oversight by Christopher F. Nesbitt, Sr., NH EMT & BU-trained Paralegal, using professional regulatory data auditing protocols.

Medical Perspective: As emergency medical professionals, we understand how nursing home violations can escalate to health emergencies requiring ambulance transport. This analysis contextualizes regulatory findings within real-world patient safety implications.

Last verified: March 25, 2026 | Learn more about our methodology

📋 Quick Answer

LA HACIENDA DE PAZ REHABILITATION AND CARE CENTER in EAGLE PASS, TX was cited for violations during a health inspection on December 10, 2025.

The facility has not submitted a plan of correction for the cited violations.

What this means: Health inspections identify deficiencies that facilities must correct. Violations range from minor documentation issues to serious safety concerns. Review the full report below for specific details and facility response.

Frequently Asked Questions

What happened at LA HACIENDA DE PAZ REHABILITATION AND CARE CENTER?
The facility has not submitted a plan of correction for the cited violations.
How serious are these violations?
Violation severity varies from minor documentation issues to serious safety concerns. Review the inspection report for specific deficiency codes and scope. All violations must be corrected within required timeframes and are subject to follow-up verification inspections.
What should families do?
Families should: (1) Ask facility administration about specific corrective actions taken, (2) Request to see the follow-up inspection report verifying corrections, (3) Check if this represents a pattern by reviewing prior inspection reports, (4) Compare this facility's ratings with other nursing homes in EAGLE PASS, TX, (5) Report any new concerns directly to state authorities.
Where can I see the full inspection report?
The complete inspection report is available on Medicare.gov's Care Compare website (www.medicare.gov/care-compare). You can also request a copy directly from LA HACIENDA DE PAZ REHABILITATION AND CARE CENTER or from the state Department of Health. The report includes specific deficiency codes, facility responses, and correction timelines. This facility's federal provider number is 676419.
Has this facility had violations before?
To check LA HACIENDA DE PAZ REHABILITATION AND CARE CENTER's history, visit Medicare.gov's Care Compare and review their inspection history, quality ratings, and staffing levels. Look for patterns of repeated violations, especially in critical areas like abuse prevention, medication management, infection control, and resident safety.
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