The missing care plans affected residents with complex medical needs, including one man with moderate cognitive impairment, a fractured femur, high blood pressure, and obesity. Federal inspectors found no care plan existed for any of the three residents during a December 30 complaint investigation.

The facility's own policy requires comprehensive care plans to guide staff in providing "person-centered care" tailored to each resident's specific medical, nursing, and psychological needs. Without these plans, the Director of Nursing told inspectors, "everyone received generalized care."
One affected resident was admitted with a fractured thighbone and scored 07 on a cognitive assessment, indicating moderate impairment. His admission evaluation triggered care areas for cognitive loss, fall risk, incontinence, psychological well-being, pressure ulcers, pain management, and nutritional status. Despite these multiple care needs requiring specialized attention, no individualized plan was developed.
The MDS Coordinator explained that staffing changes three weeks prior had disrupted the care planning process. Two nurses had previously handled the assessments, with one responsible for ground floor residents and skilled nursing patients while he managed the remaining residents.
Federal regulations require nursing homes to complete admission assessments within 14 days and comprehensive care plans within 21 days. The MDS Coordinator acknowledged these timeframes, telling inspectors the care plan was "important because if it were read by everyone, they would have a blueprint to resident centered care."
The Director of Nursing emphasized that individualized care plans were essential for proper treatment. She stated that care plans provided "an individualized guide to resident care" and that without them, staff could not deliver the specialized attention each resident required.
Park Place's written policy commits the facility to developing comprehensive care plans that include "measurable objectives and timeframes to meet a resident's medical, nursing, and mental and psychosocial needs." The policy states these plans should help residents "attain or maintain the resident's highest practicable physical, mental, and psychosocial well-being."
The inspection revealed a breakdown in this fundamental care process. Despite having detailed assessments identifying specific care needs for each resident, the facility failed to translate those findings into actionable treatment plans for staff to follow.
The MDS Coordinator could not explain why his predecessor had left the care plans incomplete before departing. This gap in documentation meant nursing staff, therapists, and other caregivers lacked specific guidance for addressing each resident's individual medical conditions and care requirements.
For the resident with the fractured femur and cognitive impairment, this meant staff had no written plan addressing his fall risk, pain management needs, or strategies for working with someone experiencing moderate cognitive difficulties. His admission assessment had identified needs for supervision and assistance with daily activities, but no care plan existed to guide staff in providing that support.
The facility policy requires care plans to be "person-centered" and tailored to help each resident achieve their "highest practical quality of life." Without these individualized roadmaps, staff were left to provide generic care that might not address the specific challenges and goals identified during each resident's comprehensive assessment.
The three residents affected by the missing care plans represented different levels of care needs within the facility, suggesting the staffing disruption had created a systematic gap in the care planning process rather than isolated oversights.
Federal inspectors classified the violation as having potential for minimal harm to some residents. However, the facility's own leadership acknowledged the importance of individualized care planning in ensuring residents receive appropriate treatment for their specific conditions and circumstances.
The inspection found that Park Place had the assessment information needed to develop proper care plans but had failed to complete the critical step of translating those evaluations into actionable guidance for daily care delivery.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Park Place Nursing & Rehabilitation Center from 2025-12-30 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.
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