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Hillside Nursing Center Of Wake Forest

For profit - Corporation  ·  968 East Wait Avenue, Wake Forest, NC 27588  ·  See home’s Medicare page

4.17
Nurse hours/resident/day
Reported total nurse staffing hours per resident per day.
State Average: 3.8
36.5%
Nurse turnover
The percentage of nursing staff who stopped working at the home over a 12-month period.
State Average: 50.4%
130
Certified beds
Qualifying beds in the certified provider or supplier facility.
105
Average residents/day
Average number of residents based on daily census.
Direct owners are the layer of ownership closest to the nursing home while indirect owners have a stake in the nursing home but are further removed, like a company that owns the direct owner of a home. All owners listed below are people or companies who have at least a 5% stake in the nursing home. Entities with “managerial control” are those who conduct the day-to-day operations of the nursing home.
Direct owners
Mary Margaret Clifton (45%)
Riley Evans (15%)
Robert Evans (15%)
Florence Jonhson (15%)
Richard Bennett (10%)
Indirect owners
No indirect owner information
Managerial control
Robert Evans since Jan, 2002
Karen Thompson since Oct, 2021
Managing employee(s)
No information available

Inspection Reports

Inspection reports document deficiencies, which are nursing homes’ failures to meet care requirements. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services releases the last three standard inspection reports, as well as the last 36 months of complaint and infection-control reports.
1

total deficiencies

Jun 8, 2023
Standard report
1 deficiency
E

Pharmacy Service Deficiency — F0761
Failure to: Ensure drugs and biologicals used in the facility are labeled in accordance with currently accepted professional principles; and all drugs and biologicals must be stored in locked compartments, separately locked, compartments for controlled drugs.
Severity
No actual harm, with a potential for more than minimal harm
Scope
Some people affected
Seriousness
E

Penalties

A nursing home receives a penalty, either a fine or payment suspensions, when it has a serious health citation or fails to fix a citation. Fines may be imposed once per citation or regularly until the nursing home corrects the citation. Fines not associated with inspection reports can include fines for not reporting COVID-19 data or not complying with infection-control requirements. Payment suspensions are when the government stops payments to the nursing home until an issue is fixed. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services releases the last three years of penalty information.
This home has no record of fines or payment suspensions for the past three years.