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Infinity Care East LA: POLST Translation Failure - CA

Healthcare Facility
Infinity Care Of East Los Angeles
Los Angeles, CA  ·  2/5 stars

The form was a POLST, a Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment. It is not a general intake document or a routine consent form. It is the document that tells emergency responders and nursing staff whether to attempt resuscitation, whether to send a resident to the hospital, how aggressively to treat a medical crisis. When a resident signs one, that signature is supposed to mean something.

The inspection at Infinity Care, completed November 19, 2025, found that the resident's POLST had been signed without her understanding what she was signing. The facility's own policy required that residents with limited English proficiency receive competent oral translation of vital information, including consent for treatment, at no cost and through trained interpreters. The policy listed four ways to make that happen: a trained bilingual staff member, a contracted interpreter service, a telephone interpretation line, or a formally trained medical interpreter. None of them, the record suggests, were used here.

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The facility's POLST policy was equally specific. To be valid, the form required a physician's signature, or that of a nurse practitioner or physician assistant working within authorized scope of practice, and the signature of the resident or her designated decisionmaker. The policy also addressed translated forms directly: if a translated version is used with a patient or decisionmaker, it must be attached to the signed English POLST. There is no indication that happened.

What the inspection found was a resident who had signed a document governing her own death and resuscitation without understanding what it said.

Inspectors classified the violation under F0578, which covers a resident's right to self-determination, including the right to formulate advance directives. The level of harm was listed as minimal harm or potential for actual harm. Few residents were noted as affected.

The classification is worth sitting with. "Minimal harm or potential for actual harm" is the language regulators use when something went wrong but no one was visibly injured yet. It is not the language that triggers emergency intervention or immediate jeopardy findings. It is the language that gets a plan of correction filed and a follow-up scheduled.

But a POLST is not a form where the gap between "no visible injury" and "catastrophic consequence" is wide. It is a form where the consequence of a misunderstood signature can arrive in the middle of the night, when a resident stops breathing and staff look at a document she didn't understand to decide whether to call a code.

Infinity Care of East Los Angeles sits at 101 S. Fickett Street in the 90033 zip code, a neighborhood where Spanish is the primary language in a substantial share of households. The facility's own translation policy acknowledged this reality. It committed the facility to meaningful access for residents with limited English proficiency. It named the tools available. It put the obligation in writing.

The resident signed anyway. And when inspectors spoke with her, she told them she did not understand what she had signed.

The inspection report does not say whether anyone has since sat with her, in her language, and explained what the form means, or whether she has had the chance to change it.

Full Inspection Report

The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Infinity Care of East Los Angeles from 2025-11-19 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: June 20, 2026  ·  Our methodology

Quick Answer

INFINITY CARE OF EAST LOS ANGELES in LOS ANGELES, CA was cited for violations during a health inspection on November 19, 2025.

The form was a POLST, a Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment.

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 INFINITY CARE OF EAST LOS ANGELES?
The form was a POLST, a Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment.
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 LOS ANGELES, CA, (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 INFINITY CARE OF EAST LOS ANGELES 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 056063.
Has this facility had violations before?
To check INFINITY CARE OF EAST LOS ANGELES'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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