BARRIGADA, GU — Federal health inspectors identified 18 separate deficiencies at Guam Memorial Hospital Authority during a standard health inspection completed on August 22, 2025, including infection control failures related to COVID-19 vaccination protocols that placed residents at potential risk.

COVID-19 Vaccination Protocol Failures
Among the deficiencies documented, inspectors found that Guam Memorial Hospital Authority failed to meet federal requirements under regulatory tag F0887, which governs COVID-19 vaccination education, administration, and documentation in long-term care settings.
Specifically, the facility did not adequately educate residents and staff on COVID-19 vaccination, failed to offer the vaccine to all eligible individuals after education, and did not properly document the vaccination status of each resident and staff member.
Inspectors classified this deficiency at Scope/Severity Level E, indicating a pattern of noncompliance rather than an isolated incident. While no actual harm was documented at the time of inspection, federal surveyors determined there was potential for more than minimal harm to residents.
Why Vaccination Compliance Matters in Long-Term Care
Nursing home and long-term care residents remain among the most vulnerable populations for respiratory infections, including COVID-19. Older adults and individuals with chronic health conditions face significantly higher rates of hospitalization and death from COVID-19 compared to the general population.
Federal vaccination requirements exist because congregate living settings — where residents share common spaces, dining areas, and often rely on close physical contact with caregivers — create conditions where respiratory viruses spread rapidly. When a facility fails to systematically educate, offer, and track vaccinations, it leaves gaps in the protective barrier that immunization provides.
Proper documentation is equally critical. Without accurate vaccination records, clinical staff cannot make informed decisions about infection control measures, isolation protocols, or treatment plans when outbreaks occur. A facility that cannot readily identify which residents and staff members are vaccinated faces delays in response time during an active outbreak.
The pattern-level finding is particularly notable. A pattern designation means inspectors observed the deficiency across multiple instances or residents rather than in a single case — suggesting a systemic issue in the facility's vaccination program rather than an isolated oversight.
18 Deficiencies Signal Broader Compliance Concerns
The COVID-19 vaccination failure was one component of a much larger inspection outcome. With 18 total deficiencies cited during a single survey, Guam Memorial Hospital Authority faces questions about its overall regulatory compliance and quality assurance processes.
For context, the national average number of deficiencies per nursing home inspection varies by facility size and type, but a count of 18 from a single survey represents a substantial compliance burden. Each deficiency reflects a specific area where the facility did not meet the minimum federal standards established by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) to protect residents.
Multiple deficiencies across different care categories can indicate that underlying operational issues — such as staffing levels, training programs, or administrative oversight — may need attention beyond simply correcting individual violations.
Facility Response and Correction Timeline
Guam Memorial Hospital Authority has acknowledged the deficiencies and reported a correction date of October 6, 2025, approximately six weeks after the inspection. The facility's status is listed as "deficient, provider has date of correction," meaning the facility has committed to a remediation plan.
Federal regulations require facilities to submit a plan of correction detailing the specific steps they will take to address each deficiency, prevent recurrence, and monitor ongoing compliance. CMS may conduct follow-up surveys to verify that corrections have been implemented.
What Residents and Families Should Know
Families with loved ones at Guam Memorial Hospital Authority can review the full inspection report, including all 18 cited deficiencies, through the CMS Care Compare website. These reports provide detailed descriptions of each finding and the facility's correction plans.
Residents and their representatives have the right to request information about the facility's vaccination programs, infection control protocols, and most recent inspection results. Facilities receiving Medicare or Medicaid funding are required to make this information available upon request.
The August 2025 inspection results will remain part of the facility's public compliance record and may factor into its overall CMS quality rating.
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.