WOONSOCKET, RI — Federal health inspectors identified 12 deficiencies at The Friendly Home during a complaint investigation completed on December 19, 2025, including a citation for failing to provide required behavioral health care and services to residents.

Behavioral Health Services Found Lacking
The inspection, conducted under federal nursing home oversight standards, determined that The Friendly Home did not meet regulatory requirements under F-tag F0740, which mandates that each resident receive necessary behavioral health care and that the facility provide those services.
The deficiency falls under the category of Quality of Life and Care Deficiencies — a classification that addresses fundamental standards nursing homes must meet to ensure residents' daily needs and clinical requirements are appropriately managed.
Federal regulators assigned the violation a Scope/Severity Level D, indicating an isolated incident where no actual harm was documented but where the potential existed for more than minimal harm to residents. While Level D represents the lower end of the federal severity scale, the nature of behavioral health care gaps raises important clinical considerations.
Why Behavioral Health Services Matter in Long-Term Care
Behavioral health needs among nursing home residents are widespread and clinically significant. Conditions such as depression, anxiety, dementia-related behavioral changes, and adjustment disorders are common in long-term care settings. According to federal data, an estimated 65% of nursing home residents have some form of cognitive impairment, and many experience co-occurring behavioral health conditions that require active management.
When facilities fail to deliver behavioral health services, residents may experience worsening psychiatric symptoms, increased agitation, social withdrawal, and a measurable decline in overall quality of life. Untreated depression in older adults, for example, is associated with higher rates of physical health complications, reduced participation in rehabilitation, and increased fall risk.
Federal regulations require nursing homes to ensure residents have access to appropriate behavioral health interventions, which may include psychiatric evaluations, counseling, medication management, and staff-administered behavioral support plans. These are not optional enhancements — they are federally mandated components of the care nursing homes are required to deliver.
12 Total Deficiencies Signal Broader Concerns
The behavioral health citation was one of 12 deficiencies identified during the December 2025 inspection, a number that warrants attention. While individual deficiencies vary in severity, a double-digit citation count during a single survey suggests the facility was facing challenges across multiple areas of care delivery and regulatory compliance.
For context, the national average number of deficiencies per nursing home inspection is approximately 8 to 9, according to federal benchmarking data. The Friendly Home's 12 citations place it above that threshold, indicating performance gaps that extend beyond a single regulatory category.
Correction Timeline
The Friendly Home has been classified as "Deficient, Provider has date of correction" for the behavioral health citation, with the facility reporting that corrective action was completed by January 18, 2026 — approximately 30 days after the inspection. Federal regulators typically require facilities to submit plans of correction detailing the specific steps taken to resolve identified deficiencies and prevent recurrence.
What Families Should Know
Families with loved ones at The Friendly Home — or any long-term care facility — should be aware of their right to review inspection findings. Federal inspection reports are public records available through the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Care Compare website, which provides facility-level data on deficiency history, staffing levels, and quality measures.
Key questions families may want to raise with facility administrators include whether behavioral health screenings are conducted at admission and at regular intervals, what behavioral health professionals are available on-site or by referral, and how the facility monitors residents for changes in mood or psychiatric status.
Residents in nursing homes have the federally protected right to receive care and services that meet professional standards of quality. When deficiencies are identified, facilities are obligated to implement corrective measures and demonstrate sustained compliance.
The full inspection report for The Friendly Home is available for review and provides additional detail on all 12 deficiencies cited during the December 2025 survey.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for The Friendly Home from 2025-12-19 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.
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