Ormond Rehabilitation And Nursing Center
Inspection Findings
F-Tag F0628
F 0628 Level of Harm - Minimal harm or potential for actual harm Residents Affected - Few
FORM CMS-2567 (02/99) Previous Versions Obsolete
notified of the residents plans during the Patient-Driven Payment Model (PDPM) meeting, quarterly assessment and care planning. She was involved with Resident #1 discharge and that the discharge notification came from the administrator. When asked if Resident #1 was provided prior notification for discharge, she stated that the Administrator told her that she had communicated with the ombudsman about it. Therefore, she proceeded to secure placement and resident was moved out. During a phone
interview with the Ombudsman on 8/19/25 at 2:30 pm, she confirmed that their office does not make any discharge recommendation, and they were not consulted of any discharge from the facility. She also stated that the facility had not sent any Transfer/Discharge notices since January 2025. Review of the facility's Transfer/Discharge Policy Dated April 2022 revealed that the Center provide a resident/resident representative with thirty days written notice of impending discharge.Policy Interpretation and Implementation: Except as specified below, a resident/his or her representative will be given a thirty (30)-day advance notice of an impending transferor discharge from the Center: a. The transfer is necessary for the resident's welfare and the resident's needs cannot be met in the Center.b. The transfer or discharge is appropriate because the resident's health has improved sufficiently so the resident no longer needs the services provided by the Center;c. The safety of individuals in the Center is endangered; d. The health of individuals in the Center would otherwise be endangered;e. The resident has failed, after reasonable and appropriate notice, to pay for (or to have paid under Medicare or Medicaid) a stay at the Center.f. An immediate transfer or discharge is required by the resident's urgent medical needs. g. The resident is transferred for other than medical reasons.h. The resident has not resided in the Center for thirty (30) days; and/[NAME]. The Center ceases to operate.The resident/representative will be provided with the following information:a. The reason for the transfer or discharge. b. The effective date of the transfer or discharge.c.
The location to which the resident is being transferred or discharged .d. The name, address, and telephone number of the state long-term care Ombudsman. e. The name, address, and telephone number of each individual or agency responsible for the protection and advocacy of mentally ill or developmental disabled individuals (as applies); and f. The name address and telephone number of the state health department agency that has been designated to handle appeals of transfers and discharge notices.
Event ID:
Facility ID:
If continuation sheet
ORMOND REHABILITATION AND NURSING CENTER in ORMOND BEACH, FL inspection on recent inspection.
Found 0 violation(s). Severity: Standard violations. Status: 0 corrected, 0 pending.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What is an F-tag violation?
- F-tags are federal deficiency codes used by CMS to categorize nursing home violations. Each F-tag corresponds to a specific federal regulation (42 CFR Part 483). For example, F607 relates to abuse prevention policies, F880 relates to infection control.
- Were these violations corrected?
- Facilities must submit plans of correction and implement changes within required timeframes. CMS conducts follow-up inspections to verify corrections. Check the inspection report for specific correction dates and follow-up verification status.
- How often do nursing home inspections happen?
- CMS conducts unannounced inspections of all Medicare/Medicaid-certified nursing homes at least once per year. Additional inspections may occur based on complaints, facility-reported incidents, or follow-up to verify previous violations were corrected.
- What should families do about these violations?
- Families should: (1) Review the full inspection report for details, (2) Ask facility administration about specific corrective actions taken, (3) Check if this represents a pattern by reviewing prior inspections, (4) Compare with other facilities in ORMOND BEACH, FL, (5) Report new concerns to state authorities.
- Where can I see the full inspection report?
- Complete inspection reports are available on Medicare.gov's Care Compare website (www.medicare.gov/care-compare). You can also request copies directly from ORMOND REHABILITATION AND NURSING CENTER or from the state Department of Health. Reports include deficiency codes, facility responses, and correction timelines.