PENNSAUKEN, NJ — Federal health inspectors identified seven deficiencies at River Front Rehabilitation and Healthcare Center during a complaint investigation completed on November 21, 2025, including a failure to maintain an adequate pest control program. The facility has not submitted a plan of correction for the cited violations.

Pest Control Program Found Deficient
Inspectors cited the facility under federal regulatory tag F0925, which requires nursing homes to implement and maintain a pest control program capable of preventing and addressing infestations of mice, insects, and other pests. The deficiency was classified at Scope/Severity Level E, indicating a pattern of non-compliance that, while not resulting in documented actual harm, carried the potential for more than minimal harm to residents.
A Level E classification means the problem was not an isolated incident. Inspectors identified a pattern of pest control failures across the facility, suggesting systemic issues with how the Pennsauken nursing home manages its environmental safety protocols.
Why Pest Control Matters in Nursing Homes
Pest infestations in long-term care settings pose serious health risks that extend well beyond simple discomfort. Mice and rodents can carry hantavirus, salmonella, and leptospirosis, while cockroaches are known triggers for asthma and allergic reactions — conditions particularly dangerous for elderly residents with compromised immune systems or chronic respiratory illness.
Insects such as ants and flies can contaminate food preparation and storage areas, increasing the risk of foodborne illness among a population already vulnerable to infection. Bed bugs, another common nursing home pest, cause skin irritation, secondary infections from scratching, and significant psychological distress.
For residents with limited mobility — many of whom cannot simply move away from pests or report their presence — an inadequate pest control program represents a failure of the facility's basic duty to provide a safe, sanitary living environment.
Federal Standards for Environmental Safety
Under federal regulations, nursing homes participating in Medicare and Medicaid programs are required to maintain facilities that are free from pest infestations. This means not merely reacting to pest sightings after they occur, but implementing a proactive, ongoing pest management program that includes regular inspections, preventive treatments, sealing of entry points, proper waste management, and documentation of all pest control activities.
The standard of care requires facilities to contract with licensed pest control professionals, maintain treatment schedules, and promptly address any reported pest activity. Staff members should be trained to identify signs of infestation and report them immediately through established protocols.
When inspectors identify a pattern-level deficiency, it typically indicates that the facility's existing pest control measures — if any were in place — were insufficient to prevent recurring problems across multiple areas or over an extended period.
Seven Deficiencies and No Correction Plan
The pest control citation was one of seven total deficiencies identified during the complaint investigation at River Front Rehabilitation and Healthcare Center. The investigation was initiated in response to a complaint filed with regulators, suggesting that concerns about conditions at the facility had already been raised by residents, family members, or staff.
Perhaps most concerning is the facility's response — or lack thereof. As of the inspection record, River Front Rehabilitation and Healthcare Center is listed as "Deficient, Provider has no plan of correction." Federal regulations require facilities to submit a plan of correction detailing how they will address each cited deficiency, the steps they will take to prevent recurrence, and a timeline for achieving compliance.
The absence of a correction plan raises questions about the facility's commitment to resolving the identified problems and protecting its residents from potential harm.
What Families Should Know
Family members of residents at River Front Rehabilitation and Healthcare Center may wish to review the full inspection report, which details all seven deficiencies identified during the November 2025 investigation. Inspection results are publicly available through the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Care Compare website.
Families are encouraged to ask facility administrators directly about what steps are being taken to address the cited violations, particularly regarding pest management and overall environmental safety. Residents and family members also have the right to file complaints with the New Jersey Department of Health if they observe ongoing concerns.
The full inspection report for River Front Rehabilitation and Healthcare Center is available on NursingHomeNews.org for detailed review of all cited deficiencies.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for River Front Rehabilitation and Healthcare Center from 2025-11-21 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.