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Parkview Home: Care Plan Failures Cited in Inspection - MN

Healthcare Facility
Parkview Home
Belview, MN  ·  2/5 stars

The deficiency, cited during a standard federal health inspection on May 6, 2026, falls under a category regulators call Resident Assessment and Care Planning. The specific failure: Parkview Home did not develop complete care plans within seven days of finishing comprehensive resident assessments, and the plans that existed had not been properly prepared, reviewed, and revised by the required team of health professionals.

No resident was documented as having been harmed. But inspectors assigned the finding a severity level that means they believed the potential for more than minimal harm was real.

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That distinction matters. A care plan is not paperwork for its own sake. It records what a resident needs, what risks they carry, and what every member of the care team is supposed to do about both. When it is incomplete, or late, or never reviewed by the people responsible for a resident's care, the people working the floor may not know what they are dealing with. A fall risk goes unmarked. A swallowing problem goes uncommunicated. A wound that needs a specific dressing protocol exists only in someone's memory, not in the chart.

Parkview Home was cited for five total deficiencies during the May inspection. The care planning failure was one of them.

What stands out in the record is not just the violation itself, but what came after it. As of the inspection record, the facility had submitted no plan of correction. Regulators who cite a deficiency expect the provider to respond with a specific, dated commitment to fix what was found. Parkview Home had not done that.

A plan of correction is the mechanism through which a facility tells regulators: here is what went wrong, here is what we are doing about it, and here is when it will be done. The absence of one does not mean the problem has been ignored. It may mean the paperwork trail has not caught up. But it also means there is no documented accountability, no stated timeline, and no written commitment that the residents currently living at Parkview Home will have complete, team-reviewed care plans guiding their treatment.

Belview is a small city in Redwood County in southwestern Minnesota. Parkview Home is the kind of facility that serves a rural community where there may be no other option nearby, where families place a parent or grandparent and trust that the systems inside the building are working the way they are supposed to work.

Care planning failures are among the more common deficiencies cited in nursing home inspections nationwide, and they are sometimes dismissed as administrative shortcomings rather than clinical ones. That framing understates what a care plan actually does. It is the document that a night-shift aide consults when they are new to a resident. It is what a physical therapist checks before deciding how hard to push someone recovering from a hip replacement. It is what a nurse reviews when a resident's condition changes and they need to know what the baseline was supposed to look like.

When those documents are incomplete, or assembled after the window has passed, or never reviewed by the team of professionals who are supposed to sign off on them, the gap between what a resident needs and what the staff knows about that need can quietly widen.

Inspectors rated this deficiency at scope level D, meaning it was isolated rather than widespread. That suggests the problem did not touch every resident in the building. It does not say how many it did touch, or which ones, or what was missing from their plans when inspectors arrived.

The record does not say. And as of the date of the inspection, Parkview Home had not yet said either.

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


Editorial Standards

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

Quick Answer

Parkview Home in BELVIEW, MN was cited for violations during a health inspection on May 6, 2026.

The deficiency, cited during a standard federal health inspection on May 6, 2026, falls under a category regulators call Resident Assessment and Care Planning.

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 Parkview Home?
The deficiency, cited during a standard federal health inspection on May 6, 2026, falls under a category regulators call Resident Assessment and Care Planning.
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 BELVIEW, MN, (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 Parkview Home 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 245475.
Has this facility had violations before?
To check Parkview Home'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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