TROY, PA - Federal health inspectors identified 11 deficiencies at Bradford Hills Nursing & Rehabilitation Center during a standard health inspection completed on December 12, 2025, including a citation for failing to maintain an adequate infection prevention and control program.

Infection Prevention Program Found Deficient
Bradford Hills was cited under federal regulatory tag F0880, which requires skilled nursing facilities to develop, implement, and maintain a comprehensive infection prevention and control program. The citation, classified at Scope/Severity Level D, indicates an isolated incident where no actual harm occurred but the potential existed for more than minimal harm to residents.
Infection prevention programs in nursing homes are designed to protect some of the most medically vulnerable individuals in the healthcare system. Nursing home residents are disproportionately susceptible to infections due to factors including advanced age, compromised immune systems, chronic medical conditions, and the close communal living environment inherent to long-term care settings.
A properly functioning infection control program includes protocols for hand hygiene, personal protective equipment usage, environmental cleaning, antibiotic stewardship, and surveillance systems to identify and contain outbreaks before they spread. When any component of this system breaks down, even in an isolated instance, the consequences can escalate rapidly in a congregate care setting.
Why Infection Control Gaps Pose Elevated Risks
The human body's immune response weakens with age, a process known as immunosenescence. For elderly nursing home residents, this means that infections which might cause only mild illness in younger individuals can lead to hospitalization, sepsis, or death. Common nursing home infections include urinary tract infections, respiratory infections, skin and soft tissue infections, and gastrointestinal illnesses.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, nursing homes across the country experienced the devastating consequences of inadequate infection control firsthand. Federal regulators subsequently strengthened enforcement of infection prevention requirements, making F0880 citations a key area of scrutiny during inspections.
An isolated infection control lapse — even one that has not yet resulted in documented harm — represents a gap in the facility's protective infrastructure. Infections in nursing homes spread through multiple vectors: direct contact between staff and residents, contaminated surfaces, shared equipment, and airborne transmission in common areas such as dining rooms and activity spaces.
No Plan of Correction on File
Perhaps the most notable aspect of this citation is that Bradford Hills has not submitted a plan of correction to federal regulators. When a facility receives a deficiency citation, it is required to develop and submit a detailed corrective action plan outlining specific steps it will take to address the identified problem and prevent recurrence.
The absence of a correction plan means that, as of the inspection date, there is no documented commitment from the facility to resolve the infection control deficiency. Federal regulations require facilities to submit these plans within a specified timeframe, and failure to do so can result in escalating enforcement actions, including civil monetary penalties, denial of payment for new admissions, or other sanctions.
Eleven Total Deficiencies Identified
The infection control citation was one of 11 deficiencies documented during the December 2025 inspection. Multiple deficiency citations during a single survey suggest broader systemic issues with regulatory compliance at a facility. The national average for deficiencies per nursing home inspection is approximately 7 to 8 citations, placing Bradford Hills above the typical benchmark.
Facilities with elevated deficiency counts often face increased scrutiny from both federal and state regulators, including more frequent follow-up inspections and potential placement on special monitoring programs.
What Families Should Know
Bradford Hills Nursing & Rehabilitation Center is located in Troy, Pennsylvania, in Bradford County. Families of current and prospective residents can review the facility's complete inspection history, including all 11 deficiencies from the December 2025 survey, through the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Care Compare website.
Infection control compliance is one of several key indicators that healthcare professionals recommend families evaluate when selecting or monitoring a nursing home. Other important factors include staffing levels, overall star ratings, complaint investigations, and the facility's track record on correcting previously identified deficiencies.
The full inspection report contains additional details on all cited deficiencies at Bradford Hills. Readers are encouraged to review the complete findings for a comprehensive understanding of the facility's current regulatory standing.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Bradford Hills Nursing & Rehabilitation Center from 2025-12-12 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.