Parkview Home: Pharmacy Service Failure Cited - MN
The citation, issued May 6, 2026, covers one of the most fundamental obligations a nursing home carries: making sure residents get the pharmaceutical care they need. Inspectors found Parkview Home deficient in its ability to provide pharmaceutical services and to employ or obtain the services of a licensed pharmacist.
The facility has submitted no plan of correction.
That last detail matters. Nursing homes that receive deficiency citations are expected to respond with documented plans explaining what went wrong, what they will do about it, and by when. Parkview Home has offered none of that. Inspectors came, found a problem, and the facility's response has been silence.
The violation was classified at Scope/Severity Level D, meaning inspectors characterized it as isolated and found no documented actual harm to residents. But Level D is not a clean bill of health. The classification also means inspectors determined there was potential for more than minimal harm. In the context of pharmaceutical services, that potential is not abstract. Medication errors, missed doses, drug interactions, prescriptions that go unfilled or unreviewed — these are the kinds of consequences that flow from breakdowns in pharmacy oversight. Older adults in nursing facilities are among the most medically complex patients in any care setting, often managing multiple chronic conditions with multiple medications simultaneously.
Parkview Home was cited under regulatory tag F0755, which addresses the obligation to provide pharmaceutical services that meet each resident's individual needs, and to ensure a licensed pharmacist is either employed by the facility or available through a contracted arrangement. The inspection report does not specify which part of that requirement the facility failed to meet — whether the problem was with the pharmacist arrangement itself, with how medications were being managed and distributed, or with some other aspect of the pharmacy service structure. What the report confirms is that inspectors found the facility's pharmaceutical services insufficient to meet residents' needs.
This was not an isolated inspection. Inspectors cited four additional deficiencies during the same May 6 visit, making pharmacy services one piece of a broader picture of compliance problems identified at the facility that day. The inspection report does not detail the other four citations.
Belview is a small community in Redwood County in southwestern Minnesota, and Parkview Home serves residents who, in many cases, have few alternatives nearby. That context does not change what inspectors found. It may make the absence of a correction plan harder to explain.
Nursing homes that fail to respond to citations with correction plans can face additional scrutiny from state and federal regulators. The absence of a plan does not mean the violation has been resolved. It means, as of the time this report was compiled, Parkview Home had not formally acknowledged what it intends to do differently.
The residents living at Parkview Home during that May inspection were not identified in the report by name. The citation describes their situation in aggregate: pharmaceutical services that did not meet their needs, potential for harm, and a facility that has not yet explained how it plans to close that gap.
For family members of residents at Parkview Home, the inspection record is publicly available through the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. It reflects what inspectors found on one day in May. It does not reflect what has happened since, or whether the facility has taken steps outside the formal correction process to address the pharmacy deficiency. What it does reflect, plainly, is that the facility was found lacking in an area that touches every resident's daily care, and that no written commitment to improvement has followed.
The medications residents at Parkview Home depend on to manage pain, prevent infections, regulate blood pressure, and control a range of other conditions do not stop mattering because a correction plan has not been filed.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Parkview Home from 2026-05-06 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.
Additional Resources
Data source: Official federal inspection data from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS).
Editorial process: AI-synthesized regulatory data, reviewed for accuracy by our editorial team.
Professional review: All content reviewed by Christopher F. Nesbitt, Sr., NH EMT & BU-trained Paralegal.
Last verified: July 17, 2026 · Our methodology
Parkview Home in BELVIEW, MN was cited for violations during a health inspection on May 6, 2026.
Inspectors found Parkview Home deficient in its ability to provide pharmaceutical services and to employ or obtain the services of a licensed pharmacist.
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.