SPOKANE, WA - Royal Park Health and Rehabilitation Center faced multiple food service violations during a January 2025 state inspection, including improper staff certification and widespread complaints about unpalatable meals that led to documented weight loss in at least one resident.
Food Handler Certification Failures Create Safety Risks
The most immediate safety concern identified during the January 17, 2025 inspection involved four dietary staff members working without proper Washington State food handler certification. Three employees (Staff M, N, and O) held certificates from Food Handler Solutions, which inspectors discovered was not an approved credentialing program in Washington State. The program was intended only for personal development and preparation for actual state-provided training, not as a substitute for required certification.
A fourth staff member (Staff P) had no valid Washington State Food Workers card at all, working with only an expired certificate. When interviewed, the Dietary Manager stated they were unaware the Food Handler Solutions program did not meet state credentialing requirements.
This violation represents a significant food safety failure. State-approved food handler certification programs ensure workers understand critical food safety principles including proper temperature control, cross-contamination prevention, and personal hygiene standards. Without this training, food service workers may unknowingly engage in practices that can lead to foodborne illness outbreaks, which are particularly dangerous for nursing home residents whose immune systems may be compromised due to age or medical conditions.
The lack of proper certification affects the entire facility's 100+ residents, as improperly trained staff could contaminate food through incorrect handling, storage, or preparation methods. Foodborne illnesses can be life-threatening for elderly residents, potentially causing severe dehydration, complications from existing medical conditions, and extended hospitalizations.
Widespread Food Quality Problems Affect Nutritional Intake
The inspection revealed systematic problems with food palatability that affected seven of ten residents reviewed. Multiple residents reported receiving meat so tough it was "like rubber" and impossible to chew, along with lukewarm or cold meals that should have been served hot.
The most concerning case involved Resident 77, who experienced a 15-pound weight loss over six months, developing moderate protein-calorie malnutrition with visible muscle wasting in the abdomen, thighs, and face. Medical documentation from September 2024 showed the resident attributed their weight loss directly to disliking the facility food, stating "the food is horrible."
During the January inspection, Resident 77 told investigators: "The facility food was terrible, if I didn't have to eat, I would not eat here." The resident described receiving chicken so dry they "were unable to cut or chew it and had to place it on their fork and try to gnaw at it."
Resident 28 reported similar experiences, describing "a big lump of turkey for lunch that day, it was dry and hard and they could not cut or chew it." When Resident 28 refused the meal, no alternative food or nutritional supplement was offered, violating standard nursing home protocols for ensuring adequate nutrition.
Temperature control also emerged as a significant issue. Residents consistently reported receiving lukewarm or cold meals, with Resident 28 specifically mentioning "cold eggs for breakfast and a cold hamburger for lunch."
Medical Impact of Poor Food Quality
Inadequate nutrition poses serious health risks for nursing home residents, who may already face challenges with appetite, digestion, and maintaining healthy weight. When food is unpalatable or difficult to chew, residents may reduce their food intake, leading to protein-energy malnutrition, muscle wasting, and compromised immune function.
Proper nutrition is essential for wound healing, infection resistance, and maintaining strength for daily activities. Residents who cannot adequately chew food due to texture problems may aspirate food particles, potentially causing pneumonia. Cold food temperatures not only affect palatability but can also indicate failures in food safety protocols, as hot foods must be maintained at specific temperatures to prevent bacterial growth.
The documented weight loss and malnutrition in Resident 77 illustrates how food quality directly impacts resident health outcomes. Unintentional weight loss in nursing home residents is associated with increased mortality risk, longer hospital stays, and reduced quality of life.
Systemic Kitchen Management Issues
Inspector observations revealed underlying problems with kitchen operations. When inspectors sampled a test tray containing crab pasta, carrots, peach crisp, milk and water, they found the crab pasta "did not taste like crab, the sauce was bland, tasted like flour and had no appetizing flavor." The peach crisp "tasted like plain unsweetened oatmeal topped with chocolate syrup."
The Dietary Manager acknowledged that "the food was under seasoned and they had received complaints about the food." The manager explained some residents couldn't have salt, and one resident was allergic to black pepper, but this doesn't explain the widespread palatability issues affecting multiple menu items.
The manager also noted that "residents were tired of the food because the menu had not been changed in years," suggesting a lack of menu planning and variety that could contribute to poor nutritional intake.
Grievance Records Document Ongoing Problems
Review of facility grievance logs from July through December 2024 revealed multiple formal complaints about food quality, including:
- September 3, 2024: Multiple residents complained that clam chowder "smelled and tasted bad" - August 6, 2024: Resident 40 filed a grievance stating beef tips "tasted like sawdust" - September 3, 2024: Resident 10 complained that teriyaki beef was "too tough"
These documented complaints show the food quality problems existed for months before the January 2025 inspection, indicating systematic failures in kitchen management and quality control rather than isolated incidents.
Industry Standards and Required Improvements
Federal nursing home regulations require facilities to provide nutritionally adequate, palatable, and attractively presented meals. Food must be served at proper temperatures and prepared by properly trained staff. Facilities must also ensure residents receive adequate nutrition to maintain health and prevent malnutrition.
Washington State requires all food service workers to complete approved food handler training that covers foodborne illness prevention, proper food temperatures, personal hygiene, and contamination prevention. These requirements exist specifically to protect vulnerable populations like nursing home residents.
When residents refuse meals due to palatability issues, facilities must offer alternatives or nutritional supplements to ensure adequate caloric and protein intake. The failure to provide alternatives when Resident 28 refused their meal violates these basic nutritional care standards.
Additional Issues Identified
The inspection also documented that the facility's menu had remained unchanged for years, contributing to resident dissatisfaction with food variety. Kitchen staff acknowledged receiving multiple complaints about food quality but had not implemented effective corrective measures. Temperature control problems affected multiple meal services, with residents consistently reporting lukewarm or cold food that should have been served hot.
The combination of improperly trained staff, poor food quality, inadequate temperature control, and failure to respond to resident complaints created an environment where proper nutrition was compromised, directly impacting resident health and quality of life.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Royal Park Health and Rehabilitation from 2025-01-17 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.
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