TROY, PA - Federal health inspectors identified 11 deficiencies at Bradford Hills Nursing & Rehabilitation Center during a standard health inspection completed on December 12, 2025, including a citation for failing to ensure residents maintained their ability to perform activities of daily living.

Residents at Risk of Losing Independence
Among the citations, inspectors flagged Bradford Hills under federal regulatory tag F0676, which requires nursing facilities to ensure that residents do not lose their ability to carry out basic activities of daily living — such as bathing, dressing, eating, toileting, and mobility — unless a documented medical reason justifies the decline.
Activities of daily living, commonly referred to as ADLs, are fundamental self-care tasks that directly affect a resident's quality of life and overall health. When a nursing home fails to provide adequate support and rehabilitation services, residents can experience a gradual and preventable loss of function. This decline often leads to increased dependence on staff, reduced mobility, muscle atrophy, and a heightened risk of secondary complications such as pressure ulcers, depression, and infections.
The deficiency was classified at Scope/Severity Level D, meaning it was isolated in nature and no actual harm was documented at the time of the inspection. However, inspectors determined there was potential for more than minimal harm to residents — a designation that signals real risk if the underlying issues are not corrected.
What Federal Standards Require
Under federal regulations governing Medicare- and Medicaid-certified nursing facilities, each resident must receive care and services designed to maintain or improve their highest practicable level of physical, mental, and psychosocial well-being. This means facilities are required to develop individualized care plans that include specific interventions — such as physical therapy, occupational therapy, and structured daily routines — aimed at preserving each resident's functional abilities.
When a resident shows signs of declining ADL performance, the care team is expected to reassess the resident promptly, identify contributing factors, and adjust the care plan accordingly. A failure to do so can set off a cascade of preventable decline. For example, a resident who stops walking due to inadequate assistance may develop contractures, lose bone density, and become permanently bed-bound within weeks.
Proper ADL maintenance also requires adequate staffing levels and consistent staff training. Certified nursing assistants, who provide the majority of hands-on daily care, must have sufficient time and resources to assist residents with meals, grooming, transfers, and ambulation throughout the day.
Eleven Total Citations Raise Broader Concerns
The F0676 deficiency was one of 11 citations issued to Bradford Hills during the December inspection. While the full scope of the additional deficiencies was not detailed in this specific report, receiving 11 citations in a single survey suggests systemic issues that extend beyond a single isolated incident. Multiple deficiencies often point to broader problems with facility management, staffing, training, or quality assurance programs.
Facilities that accumulate a high number of citations during a single inspection cycle may face increased scrutiny from both federal and state regulators, including more frequent follow-up surveys and potential enforcement actions.
No Correction Plan on File
Perhaps most concerning is the facility's current correction status. As of the inspection report, Bradford Hills Nursing & Rehabilitation Center was listed as "Deficient, Provider has no plan of correction." Federal regulations require facilities to submit a credible plan of correction within a specified timeframe after receiving citations. This plan must outline the specific steps the facility will take to address each deficiency and prevent recurrence.
The absence of a correction plan raises questions about whether the facility is taking the identified problems seriously. Without a clear corrective action strategy, there is no documented commitment to resolving the conditions that placed residents at risk.
How Families Can Stay Informed
Family members with loved ones at Bradford Hills or any nursing facility are encouraged to review inspection reports, which are publicly available through the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Care Compare website. These reports provide detailed information about deficiencies, severity levels, and correction timelines.
Residents and families who observe a decline in daily functioning or have concerns about care quality can contact the Pennsylvania Long-Term Care Ombudsman program for assistance and advocacy.
For full inspection details and additional deficiency information, readers can access the complete survey report through the CMS Care Compare database.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Bradford Hills Nursing & Rehabilitation Center from 2025-12-12 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.