Mission Point Nursing & Physical Rehab Center failed to notify the family when the resident developed a wound on his left foot and started antibiotics for a wound infection, according to a December 30 inspection report.

The resident had developed the new wound on December 4. Two weeks later, on December 18, staff started him on antibiotics for a wound infection. His daughter knew about neither development.
"I was not made immediately aware of the wound on his left foot," the daughter told inspectors on December 26. When asked if she knew about the antibiotic treatment that had started eight days earlier, she replied: "No, the nursing home did not notify me."
The resident had originally been admitted to the facility with multiple conditions including cellulitis of both lower legs, peripheral vascular disease, and local skin infections. His medical history made new wounds particularly concerning.
Wound Care Nurse B, who also served as the unit manager for the resident's floor, acknowledged the oversight during an interview with inspectors. When asked if families should be notified when residents develop new wounds or start antibiotics, the nurse replied it would "typically be in my rounds, but there is no documentation for any notification I can find."
Asked why the notifications were missed, Wound Care Nurse B said "it was just an oversight."
The daughter's frustration extended beyond the recent wound. She told inspectors she had questioned staff about another wound on her father's buttocks that she discovered during a visit. She also learned during the inspection interview that her father had sustained a fall that she was never told about.
"In some ways they kept me involved but other ways they didn't," she said when asked if the facility did a good job keeping her informed. "I was unaware that he had sustained a fall a while back and I was not informed of this new wound on his buttocks or foot, I was also not aware he was started on an antibiotic."
The facility's own policy requires prompt notification of family members for significant changes in a resident's condition. The written policy states that nurses will notify a resident's representative when there is "a significant change in the resident's physical, mental, or psychosocial status" and when there is "a need to alter treatment significantly."
Starting antibiotic treatment falls squarely under the policy's definition of treatment changes that require family notification. The policy specifically mentions "a need to discontinue or change an existing form of treatment due to adverse consequences, or to commence a new form of treatment."
Electronic medical records showed no documentation that the family had been contacted about either the new wound or the antibiotic treatment. The facility's wound care nurse, despite being responsible for both clinical care and unit management, found no records of any family notification attempts.
The inspection was conducted in response to a complaint. Federal inspectors reviewed three residents for change-in-condition notifications and found the facility failed to properly notify families in one case.
For elderly residents with existing vascular problems and skin infections, new wounds can signal serious complications. The resident's medical history included cellulitis in both legs and peripheral vascular disease, conditions that can make wound healing difficult and increase infection risks.
The December 4 wound developed into an infection serious enough to require antibiotic treatment by December 18. During those two crucial weeks, the family remained unaware of the developing problem.
The daughter's discovery of the buttocks wound during a facility visit suggests she was actively involved in her father's care and regularly present. Her questioning of staff about that wound indicates she was observant about changes in his condition.
Yet the facility's communication breakdown meant she learned about the foot wound and antibiotic treatment only when federal inspectors conducting a complaint investigation asked her directly about recent changes in her father's condition.
The wound care nurse's description of the missed notifications as "just an oversight" suggests the facility lacks systematic processes to ensure family communication requirements are met. As both the clinical specialist responsible for wound care and the unit manager overseeing daily operations, Wound Care Nurse B held dual responsibility for both identifying the need for family notification and ensuring it occurred.
The facility's policy clearly outlines when families must be contacted, but the implementation gap left a daughter uninformed about significant medical developments affecting her father's health and treatment plan.
Mission Point Nursing & Physical Rehab Center is located on Beecher Road in Flint. The inspection classified the violation as causing minimal harm with few residents affected, but highlighted a systemic failure in family communication that could impact trust and care coordination for vulnerable residents.
The daughter's mixed assessment of the facility's communication efforts reflects the inconsistent application of notification policies that should protect families' right to stay informed about their loved ones' medical conditions and treatment changes.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Mission Point Nursing & Physical Rehab Center of F from 2025-12-30 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.