ATLANTA, GA - Federal health inspectors documented systematic failures in infection prevention protocols at Sandy Springs Center For Nursing and Healing LLC following a complaint investigation in December 2025.


Pattern of Infection Control Deficiencies
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services classified the violations at a pattern level, indicating that multiple instances or systemic problems were identified throughout the facility. While inspectors found no residents had suffered actual harm at the time of the survey, the deficiencies created potential for more than minimal harm to the vulnerable population residing at the facility.
Infection control represents one of the most critical safety measures in nursing homes, where residents typically have compromised immune systems, chronic conditions, and age-related vulnerabilities that make them particularly susceptible to healthcare-associated infections. The federal requirement mandates that facilities establish, implement, and maintain a comprehensive infection prevention and control program.
Why Infection Prevention Matters in Nursing Homes
Healthcare-associated infections pose a significant threat to nursing home residents. Common infections in long-term care settings include urinary tract infections, respiratory infections, skin and soft tissue infections, and gastrointestinal illnesses. These infections can spread rapidly in congregate living environments when proper prevention protocols are not followed.
Effective infection control programs require multiple components working together: hand hygiene protocols, proper use of personal protective equipment, environmental cleaning procedures, isolation precautions when needed, surveillance for potential outbreaks, and staff training on prevention measures. When any of these elements fails, residents face increased exposure to potentially serious infections.
The risks are particularly acute for nursing home residents who may have indwelling medical devices such as urinary catheters or feeding tubes, open wounds, or recent surgical procedures. These individuals require especially vigilant infection prevention measures to protect their health and safety.
Federal Requirements and Standards
Federal regulations under Tag F880 require nursing homes to establish an infection prevention and control program that must include a system for preventing, identifying, reporting, investigating, and controlling infections and communicable diseases. The program must follow nationally recognized infection prevention and control guidelines.
Facilities must designate an infection preventionist who is responsible for the program, even if this is not their sole duty. The program should include written standards and policies addressing when and to whom possible incidents of communicable diseases should be reported, and a system of surveillance designed to identify potential infections before they spread.
Staff education represents another crucial component. All personnel should receive training appropriate to their roles, including proper hand hygiene techniques, appropriate use of personal protective equipment, and recognition of potential infection symptoms in residents.
Correction Timeline and Facility Response
Sandy Springs Center For Nursing and Healing LLC reported implementing corrective measures following the inspection, with a documented correction date of January 27, 2026. This suggests the facility required approximately five weeks to address the identified deficiencies and demonstrate compliance with federal infection control standards.
The complaint investigation that triggered this inspection was one of three deficiencies cited during the December 2025 survey, indicating inspectors identified multiple areas of concern during their review of facility operations.
Industry Context
Infection control has received heightened attention in nursing homes following the COVID-19 pandemic, which disproportionately affected long-term care residents and highlighted vulnerabilities in many facilities' infection prevention programs. Federal and state regulators have increased scrutiny of infection control practices, recognizing that robust programs are essential to protecting one of the most vulnerable populations.
Facilities that fail to maintain adequate infection prevention measures may face consequences beyond immediate citations, including potential denial of payment for new admissions, civil monetary penalties, or in severe cases, termination from Medicare and Medicaid programs.
Current and prospective residents of Sandy Springs Center For Nursing and Healing LLC, along with their families, can review the complete inspection report through Medicare's Nursing Home Compare website to understand the specific deficiencies identified and assess the facility's overall quality performance.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Sandy Springs Center For Nursing and Healing LLC from 2025-12-19 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.
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