cms_DC: 73
In collaboration with The Seattle Times, Big Local News is providing full-text nursing home deficiencies from Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS). These files contain the full narrative details of each nursing home deficiency cited regulators. The files include deficiencies from Standard Surveys (routine inspections) and from Complaint Surveys. Complete data begins January 2011 (although some earlier inspections do show up). Individual states are provides as CSV files. A very large (4.5GB) national file is also provided as a zipped archive. New data will be updated on a monthly basis. For additional documentation, please see the README.
This data as json, copyable
rowid
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facility_name
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facility_id
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address
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city
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state
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zip
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inspection_date
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deficiency_tag
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scope_severity
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complaint
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standard
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eventid
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inspection_text
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filedate
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73 |
SERENITY REHABILITATION AND HEALTH CENTER LLC |
95015 |
1380 SOUTHERN AVE SE |
WASHINGTON |
DC |
20032 |
2018-07-20 |
711 |
D |
0 |
1 |
L7I811 |
**NOTE- TERMS IN BRACKETS HAVE BEEN EDITED TO PROTECT CONFIDENTIALITY** Based on record review and staff interview for one (1) of 56 sampled resident, the physician failed to review the resident's total program of care for the continuation of eye drops to treat the Resident ' s eye condition ([MEDICAL CONDITION]). Resident #96. Findings included . Resident# 96 was admitted to the facility with [DIAGNOSES REDACTED]. Review of the medical record on 7/13/18 at 9:30 AM showed a physician order [REDACTED]. A review of the medical record on 7/13/18 at 10:30 AM showed Medication Administration Record (MAR) Schedule for (MONTH) (YEAR)-December (YEAR) reads Dorzolamide HC-[MEDICATION NAME] Mal Solution 22.3-6.8 MG/ML (milligram/milliliter) one drop in both eyes two times a day for [MEDICAL CONDITION] and Dorzolamide-[MEDICATION NAME] 2%-0.5% Drops instill 1 drop in both eyes two times a day for [MEDICAL CONDITION] The medication administration showed eye drops were administered to Resident#96 during the months of (MONTH) (YEAR), (MONTH) (YEAR), (MONTH) (YEAR), and (MONTH) (YEAR). A further review of the Medication Administration Record on 7/13/18 at 11:30 AM failed to show Resident # 96 received eye drops since (MONTH) (YEAR). During an interview on 7/16/18, at 12:30 PM, Employee# 4, stated I see the eye drops are not on the MAR and I don ' t see an order to stop them, let me keep looking. During a telephone interview on 7/16/18, at 1:00 PM with Employee#14 stated the Resident had multiple hospitalization s and that is why he (Resident) may not have had the Ophthalmology Consult, and the order for eye drops check to see if the eye drops are on the discharge hospital paperwork, but I understand that he should have received the order for eye drops, so he (Resident) could have gotten them (eye drops). Employee #14 could not provide further insight as to why the eye drops were not prescribed for the Resident ' s eye condition ([MEDICAL CONDITION]). During an interview with Employee#4 on 7/16/18, at 3:00 PM Employee stated no I could not find that the resident received the eye drops since (MONTH) of (YEAR), the Resident did go in and out of the hospital, but as far as I see the Resident did not receive the eye drops at all this year. Facility staff failed to provide evidence that Resident #96 received eye drops for the past seven months to treat eye condition ([MEDICAL CONDITION]). A further review of the medical record on 7/17/18, at 2:00 PM showed a physician's orders [REDACTED]. During a face-to-face interview and phone interview on 7/16/18, at 4:00 PM Employee#4 and #14 acknowledged the finding. |
2020-09-01 |