Cabarrus Health And Rehabilitation Center
Inspection Findings
F-Tag F0756
F 0756 Level of Harm - Minimal harm or potential for actual harm
who. The Medical Director stated he would expect the nursing staff and Consultant Pharmacist to cross-check admission medication orders for accuracy. The Administrator was interviewed on 10/29/25 at 1:20 PM. The Administrator explained that the Consultant Pharmacist would email or fax with any medication order discrepancies.
Residents Affected - Few
FORM CMS-2567 (02/99) Previous Versions Obsolete
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Printed: 04/13/2026 Form Approved OMB No. 0938-0391
Department of Health & Human Services Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services STATEMENT OF DEFICIENCIES AND PLAN OF CORRECTION
(X1) PROVIDER/SUPPLIER/CLIA IDENTIFICATION NUMBER:
(X2) MULTIPLE CONSTRUCTION
B. Wing
A. Building
(X3) DATE SURVEY COMPLETED
11/18/2025
NAME OF PROVIDER OR SUPPLIER
STREET ADDRESS, CITY, STATE, ZIP CODE
Cabarrus Health and Rehabilitation Center
430 Brookwood Avenue NE Concord, NC 28025
For information on the nursing home's plan to correct this deficiency, please contact the nursing home or the state survey agency. (X4) ID PREFIX TAG
SUMMARY STATEMENT OF DEFICIENCIES (Each deficiency must be preceded by full regulatory or LSC identifying information)
F-Tag F0757
F 0757 Level of Harm - Minimal harm or potential for actual harm Residents Affected - Few
FORM CMS-2567 (02/99) Previous Versions Obsolete
place to ensure accuracy for admission medication orders. She explained that there was a three-level system that included the hall nurse, the Unit Manager on the resident's hall, and the other Unit Manager checking admission orders for accuracy. The DON stated Resident #6's admission orders were transcribed incorrectly due to human error, and the cross-checks probably were not completed. She further explained that pharmacy usually sent an alert if there was a discrepancy and no alert was received. The DON also discussed the admission Audit Checklist process. This document included a review that admission orders entered into the medical record matched the hospital discharge summary. It also included that if the in-house physician changed the orders, a clarifying progress note would be present. The DON stated the Unit Manager then the Assistant Director of Nursing would review the audit check list for completion, and
she would have received the completed audits. The DON could not provide the admission Audit Checklist for Resident #6. An interview with the Medical Director on 10/29/25 at 10:15 AM, revealed he was familiar with Resident #6. He reviewed the hospital discharge medication list and the facility medication orders dated 10/8/25. The Medical Director also stated he was unaware of the Finasteride having been transcribed incorrectly and that this would not have caused harm to Resident #6. The Medical Director stated he would expect the nursing staff and Consultant Pharmacist to cross-check admission medication orders for accuracy. The Administrator was interviewed on 10/29/25 at 1:20 PM. She revealed the process for transcribing new admission orders involved nurses entering orders from the hospital discharge summary into the medical record, then being checked by the Unit Manager, and signed by the Medical Director to ensure accuracy. The Administrator was made aware of the transcription error for Resident #6 regarding the Finasteride. The Administrator stated Resident #6's Finasteride order was a transcription error.
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Cabarrus Health and Rehabilitation Center in Concord, NC 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 Concord, NC, (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 Cabarrus Health and Rehabilitation Center or from the state Department of Health. Reports include deficiency codes, facility responses, and correction timelines.