The Heights Of League City
Inspection Findings
F-Tag F0908
F 0908 Level of Harm - Minimal harm or potential for actual harm Residents Affected - Few
FORM CMS-2567 (02/99) Previous Versions Obsolete
personnel, and the public.The community has a preventive maintenance program that ensures that all essential mechanical, electrical, and patient-care equipment is in safe operating condition. The preventive maintenance program is characterized by the following: It is ongoing and under the direction of a qualified and experienced maintenance director. Routine testing and maintenance of all equipment is scheduled, and records of the testing and maintenance are kept in an organized manner. Essential equipment.is kept in safe operating condition. Equipment is maintained according to manufacturer's recommendations.
Nonoperating equipment is fixed or replaced in a timely manner. Nonoperating or damaged equipment is tagged and locked as soon as it is identified to prevent resident, visitor, or team member accident or injury.
Event ID:
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If continuation sheet
The Heights of League City in League City, TX 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 League City, TX, (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 The Heights of League City or from the state Department of Health. Reports include deficiency codes, facility responses, and correction timelines.