BARRIGADA, GU - Federal health inspectors identified 18 separate deficiencies at Guam Memorial Hospital Authority during a standard health inspection completed on August 22, 2025, revealing widespread gaps in administrative oversight and resident care monitoring at the facility.

Quality Assurance Committee Failed Federal Standards
Among the citations, inspectors flagged the facility under regulatory tag F0868 for failing to maintain a properly functioning Quality Assessment and Assurance (QAA) group. Federal regulations require that nursing facilities maintain a QAA committee with specific required members and that the group convene at least quarterly to review care standards, identify problems, and develop corrective action plans.
Inspectors determined the deficiency was widespread in scope, meaning the problem was not isolated to a single unit or department but rather affected the facility's operations broadly. While no direct resident harm was documented at the time of the inspection, federal surveyors assessed the violation at Scope/Severity Level F, indicating a potential for more than minimal harm to residents.
Why Quality Assurance Oversight Is Critical
The QAA committee serves as a facility's internal watchdog system. Under federal nursing home regulations established by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), the committee must include the facility's director of nursing, a physician, and at least three additional staff members. The group is responsible for reviewing infection rates, medication error trends, fall data, staffing concerns, and resident complaint patterns.
When a QAA committee fails to meet regularly or lacks required members, systemic care problems can go undetected for months. Medication errors may not be tracked. Infection outbreaks may not trigger protocol reviews. Staffing shortages may persist without formal assessment. The committee functions as the primary mechanism through which a facility identifies patterns of deficient care before they result in serious harm.
A facility operating without consistent quality assurance review is essentially flying without instruments โ individual incidents may be addressed reactively, but the broader trends that signal deteriorating care standards remain invisible to leadership.
Eighteen Deficiencies Signal Broader Concerns
The QAA failure was one of 18 total deficiencies identified during the inspection, a number that itself raises questions about the effectiveness of the facility's internal oversight systems. Federal nursing home inspections evaluate compliance across dozens of regulatory categories, including resident rights, infection control, medication management, staffing levels, and physical environment safety.
An inspection resulting in 18 citations suggests problems spanning multiple areas of operation. For context, the national average for deficiencies per nursing home inspection is approximately 7 to 8 citations. A count of 18 places Guam Memorial Hospital Authority well above that benchmark, indicating that care gaps extended beyond any single department or regulatory category.
The widespread nature of the QAA deficiency โ meaning it was not confined to one area โ is particularly significant in this context. A properly functioning quality assurance program might have identified and addressed some of the other 17 deficiencies before federal inspectors arrived.
Correction Timeline
The facility reported correcting the QAA deficiency as of October 6, 2025, approximately six weeks after the inspection date. Federal regulations require facilities to submit a plan of correction for all cited deficiencies and to implement changes within an agreed-upon timeframe. CMS may conduct follow-up surveys to verify that corrections have been made and sustained.
What Federal Standards Require
Under 42 CFR ยง 483.75, nursing facilities participating in Medicare and Medicaid must maintain a QAA committee that meets no less than quarterly, includes designated clinical and administrative leadership, and produces documented action plans for identified care concerns. The regulation exists because research consistently demonstrates that facilities with active quality oversight committees report lower rates of preventable adverse events, including falls, infections, and medication-related incidents.
Facilities that fail to meet these standards face potential enforcement actions ranging from civil monetary penalties to increased survey frequency. Repeated or uncorrected deficiencies can result in more severe sanctions.
Guam Memorial Hospital Authority's full inspection report, including details on all 18 cited deficiencies, is available for public review through the CMS Care Compare database. Residents, families, and advocates can access the complete findings to understand the full scope of issues identified during the August 2025 survey.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Guam Memorial Hospital Authority from 2025-08-22 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.