cms_ND: 88

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.

Data source: Big Local News · About: big-local-datasette

This data as json, copyable

rowid facility_name facility_id address city state zip inspection_date deficiency_tag scope_severity complaint standard eventid inspection_text filedate
88 MINOT HEALTH AND REHAB, LLC 355031 600 S MAIN ST MINOT ND 58701 2018-08-16 757 D 0 1 B0I611 **NOTE- TERMS IN BRACKETS HAVE BEEN EDITED TO PROTECT CONFIDENTIALITY** Based on record review and staff interview, the facility failed to ensure the resident's medication regimen was free of unnecessary medications for 1 of 18 sampled residents (Resident #35) reviewed. Failure to ensure the resident's medication regimen did not include duplicate therapy of opiate pain medications may result in the resident receiving unnecessary medication and experiencing adverse consequences related to the medication. Findings include: Resident #35's record identified the following physician's orders [REDACTED]. * 04/05/18: [MEDICATION NAME] 50 milligrams (mg) by mouth three times a day for uncontrolled pain * 04/13/18: [MEDICATION NAME]-[MEDICATION NAME] 5-325 mg one tablet by mouth four times a day for pain Review of the resident's Medication Administration Record [REDACTED]. This schedule resulted in the resident receiving two opiate medications at 8:00 a.m. and at 8:00 p.m. each day. During an interview on 08/16/18 at 11:00 a.m., when shown a copy of Resident #35's MAR, an administrative nurse (#16) stated, You are wondering why these (pain medications) aren't staggered, and made no further comment. 2020-09-01