LAS VEGAS, NV — Federal health inspectors identified six deficiencies at Marquis Plaza Regency Post Acute Rehab during a complaint investigation completed on September 12, 2025, including a citation for failing to provide safe intravenous fluid administration for residents requiring IV therapy.

IV Fluid Administration Failures
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) cited the Las Vegas post-acute rehabilitation facility under regulatory tag F0694, which requires nursing homes to ensure the safe and appropriate administration of IV fluids whenever a resident requires such treatment.
Inspectors classified the violation at Scope/Severity Level D, indicating an isolated incident where no actual harm was documented but where the potential existed for more than minimal harm to residents. While this classification falls below the most serious "immediate jeopardy" designation, IV-related deficiencies carry inherent medical risks that make even isolated failures a significant concern.
The citation fell under the broader category of Quality of Life and Care Deficiencies, reflecting a gap in the standard of clinical care expected at Medicare- and Medicaid-certified facilities.
Why Safe IV Administration Matters
Intravenous fluid therapy is a routine but medically critical procedure in post-acute rehabilitation settings. Residents recovering from surgery, illness, or dehydration frequently depend on IV fluids for medication delivery, hydration, and nutritional support.
When IV administration protocols are not followed correctly, patients face a range of potential complications. Infiltration — where IV fluid leaks into surrounding tissue rather than entering the vein — can cause swelling, tissue damage, and pain. Air embolism, though rare, can occur when air enters the IV line and can be life-threatening. Infection at the IV site remains one of the most common complications and can lead to sepsis in vulnerable elderly populations.
Proper IV administration requires trained nursing staff who monitor insertion sites for signs of inflammation, verify correct flow rates, confirm medication compatibility, and document all observations at regular intervals. Federal regulations mandate that facilities maintain staffing levels and training standards sufficient to carry out these procedures without placing residents at risk.
Industry Standards for IV Therapy
According to the Infusion Nurses Society standards of practice, IV sites should be assessed at minimum every four hours in adult patients, with more frequent monitoring for residents receiving certain medications or those with fragile veins — a common condition among elderly nursing home residents. Proper hand hygiene, sterile technique during insertion, and timely replacement of IV tubing and dressings are all considered baseline requirements.
Post-acute rehabilitation facilities like Marquis Plaza Regency serve a population that is particularly vulnerable to IV-related complications. Many residents have compromised immune systems, thinning skin, and diminished vascular integrity, making adherence to safety protocols especially important.
Six Total Deficiencies Identified
The IV administration citation was one of six total deficiencies identified during the complaint investigation. While the inspection was triggered by a specific complaint rather than being a routine survey, the multiple findings suggest broader areas where the facility's care delivery fell short of federal standards.
Complaint investigations are initiated when CMS receives reports — from residents, family members, staff, or other parties — alleging that a facility may not be meeting regulatory requirements. The fact that inspectors identified six separate deficiencies during this investigation indicates that the concerns extended beyond any single issue.
Facility Response and Correction
Marquis Plaza Regency Post Acute Rehab was classified as deficient with a provider-reported date of correction. The facility indicated that it addressed the cited deficiencies by October 20, 2025, approximately five weeks after the inspection.
Facilities that receive deficiency citations are required to submit a plan of correction to CMS outlining the specific steps taken to resolve each issue and prevent recurrence. These plans typically include staff retraining, policy revisions, and enhanced monitoring procedures.
CMS may conduct follow-up inspections to verify that corrections have been implemented and sustained. Facilities that fail to maintain compliance risk escalating enforcement actions, including civil monetary penalties, denial of payment for new admissions, or in the most serious cases, termination from the Medicare and Medicaid programs.
Residents and families can review the full inspection findings for Marquis Plaza Regency Post Acute Rehab, including all six deficiency citations, through the CMS Care Compare database or on NursingHomeNews.org's facility profile page.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Marquis Plaza Regency Post Acute Rehab from 2025-09-12 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.
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