LEXINGTON, NC — Federal health inspectors cited Lexington Health Care Center for failing to maintain an environment free from accident hazards and for providing inadequate supervision to prevent accidents, following a complaint investigation completed on December 31, 2025. The facility has not submitted a plan of correction.

Federal Complaint Investigation Findings
The inspection, triggered by a formal complaint, identified deficiencies under regulatory tag F0689, which requires nursing homes to ensure that resident areas are free from accident hazards and that adequate supervision is provided to prevent avoidable incidents.
The deficiency was classified at Scope/Severity Level D, indicating an isolated incident where no actual harm occurred but where the potential existed for more than minimal harm to residents. This classification means inspectors determined that while no resident was injured during the observed period, the conditions present created a credible risk of injury.
The accident hazard citation was one of two deficiencies identified during the inspection of the Lexington facility.
Why Accident Hazard Deficiencies Present Serious Risks
Accident prevention in nursing homes is a foundational safety requirement under federal regulations. Residents of long-term care facilities are disproportionately vulnerable to environmental hazards due to age-related factors including reduced mobility, impaired balance, diminished vision, cognitive decline, and medication side effects that can cause dizziness or disorientation.
Falls represent one of the most common and consequential accidents in nursing home settings. According to federal data, fall-related injuries are a leading cause of hospitalization and decline among nursing home residents. Hip fractures, head trauma, and other fall-related injuries can trigger a cascade of medical complications in elderly patients, including prolonged immobility, increased infection risk, and accelerated functional decline.
Adequate supervision is a critical component of accident prevention. Staffing levels, staff training, and environmental design all contribute to whether a facility can effectively monitor residents who are at elevated risk. When supervision gaps exist, residents who require assistance with mobility or who experience confusion may encounter hazardous conditions without staff intervention.
No Correction Plan on File
A particularly notable aspect of this citation is that Lexington Health Care Center has not submitted a plan of correction to federal regulators. When a facility is cited for a deficiency, it is typically required to develop and submit a detailed correction plan outlining specific steps it will take to address the identified problem and prevent recurrence.
The absence of a correction plan means there is no documented commitment from the facility to remediate the conditions that led to the citation. Federal regulators may take additional enforcement action if a facility fails to submit a timely and acceptable correction plan.
What Federal Standards Require
Under the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) regulations, nursing homes must conduct regular environmental assessments to identify and eliminate potential hazards. This includes maintaining clear walkways, ensuring proper lighting, securing loose rugs or cords, installing grab bars and handrails, and keeping floors dry and free from obstructions.
Facilities are also required to assess each resident's individual risk for accidents upon admission and at regular intervals thereafter. These assessments should inform personalized care plans that address specific risk factors such as fall history, use of assistive devices, medications that affect balance, and cognitive status.
When hazards are identified, facilities must take immediate corrective action rather than allowing conditions to persist until they result in injury.
Broader Context
Lexington Health Care Center's citation adds to the broader pattern of accident hazard deficiencies documented across nursing homes nationally. Environmental safety violations remain among the most frequently cited categories in federal nursing home inspections, underscoring the ongoing challenge facilities face in maintaining safe environments for vulnerable populations.
Residents, families, and advocates can review the full inspection findings and the facility's compliance history through the CMS Care Compare database, which provides detailed records of deficiency citations, staffing levels, and quality measures for every Medicare- and Medicaid-certified nursing home in the country.
The complete inspection report for Lexington Health Care Center contains additional details regarding the specific conditions observed and the circumstances that prompted the original complaint.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Lexington Health Care Center from 2025-12-31 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.
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