VANCOUVER, WA - Bridge Crest Post Acute received 15 deficiency citations during a federal health inspection completed on December 12, 2025, including a violation for failing to ensure residents' medication regimens were free from unnecessary drugs. The facility has not submitted a plan of correction.

Unnecessary Medication Use Identified
Federal inspectors found that Bridge Crest Post Acute failed to meet federal requirements under regulatory tag F0757, which mandates that each resident's drug regimen be free from unnecessary medications. The citation falls under the category of Pharmacy Service Deficiencies and represents a breakdown in one of the most fundamental protections for nursing home residents.
The violation was classified at Scope/Severity Level D, meaning it was isolated in nature and did not result in documented actual harm. However, inspectors determined there was potential for more than minimal harm to residents — a designation that signals real clinical risk.
Unnecessary medications in nursing home settings can include drugs prescribed without a valid clinical indication, medications used at excessive doses, or prescriptions continued well beyond their therapeutic need. For elderly residents, who often take multiple medications simultaneously, each additional or unnecessary drug increases the probability of adverse interactions and side effects.
Why Medication Oversight Matters in Long-Term Care
Nursing home residents are among the most medically vulnerable populations when it comes to pharmaceutical risks. The average long-term care resident takes seven to eight medications daily, and the physiological changes associated with aging — including reduced kidney and liver function — mean that drugs are metabolized more slowly and can accumulate to harmful levels.
Unnecessary medications in elderly patients are associated with a range of serious health consequences. Antipsychotic drugs, for example, carry FDA black-box warnings regarding increased mortality risk when used in elderly dementia patients. Sedatives and anti-anxiety medications can significantly increase fall risk, which in nursing home populations frequently leads to hip fractures, head injuries, and hospitalization.
Federal regulations require facilities to conduct regular medication reviews through consultant pharmacist services. These reviews are designed to identify drugs that lack proper indication, medications being used at inappropriate doses, and prescriptions that should be tapered or discontinued. When a facility is cited under F0757, it indicates that this safety net failed to adequately protect one or more residents.
15 Total Deficiencies Raise Broader Questions
The unnecessary medication citation was one of 15 deficiencies identified during the December 2025 inspection. While the specific details of the remaining 14 citations were not included in this report, the volume of deficiencies identified in a single inspection cycle points to potential systemic issues within the facility's operations.
According to federal data, the national average for nursing home deficiencies is approximately seven to eight per inspection. Bridge Crest Post Acute's total of 15 is nearly double the national average, placing the facility well above typical performance benchmarks.
Multiple simultaneous deficiencies often indicate that problems extend beyond a single department or process. Facilities with elevated deficiency counts may be experiencing challenges related to staffing levels, staff training, management oversight, or internal quality assurance programs.
No Correction Plan on File
Perhaps most notably, Bridge Crest Post Acute's deficiency record indicates that the provider has not submitted a plan of correction. Federal regulations require cited facilities to develop and submit a detailed corrective action plan outlining the specific steps they will take to address each deficiency and prevent recurrence.
The absence of a correction plan means there is no documented commitment from the facility regarding how it intends to resolve the identified medication safety issue or any of its other 14 deficiencies. Families of current and prospective residents should be aware that, as of the most recent federal records, these issues remain formally unaddressed.
What Families Should Know
Families with loved ones at Bridge Crest Post Acute or those considering placement at the facility may wish to review the complete inspection report, which is available through the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Care Compare website. Residents and family members also have the right to request a copy of the facility's most recent inspection results directly from the administration.
Anyone with concerns about medication management or other care issues at a nursing home facility can file a complaint with the Washington State Department of Social and Health Services or contact the local long-term care ombudsman program for advocacy assistance.
Readers can view the full inspection report for Bridge Crest Post Acute on NursingHomeNews.org for complete details on all 15 cited deficiencies.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Bridge Crest Post Acute from 2025-12-12 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.