Nursing Home Deficiencies in District of Columbia

Facilities in District of Columbia ranked by health inspection deficiencies. State average: 20.8 deficiencies (national: 9.5).

Across the 17 Medicare-certified nursing homes in District of Columbia, the average facility carries 20.8 total health-inspection deficiencies on its most recent CMS standard survey, compared with a national average of 9.5. A "deficiency" is a specific F-tag citation written by state surveyors during the annual federal inspection under 42 CFR §483, each citation maps to a scope-and-severity grid (A through L) that determines whether it is an isolated low-harm issue or a widespread immediate-jeopardy finding. The District of Columbia state-level average reflects the sum of all F-tag citations divided by the number of facilities; it does not distinguish between low-severity paperwork findings and high-severity resident-harm citations, which is why drilling into any facility's full survey report matters more than the headline count. According to CMS Nursing Home Care Compare and the National Provider Identifier Registry, covering more than 14,000 Medicare- and Medicaid-certified nursing homes with over 1 million certified beds and Five-Star Quality Ratings issued since December 2008 you can search and compare here, every figure traces to its source in our methodology.

The table below ranks up to the top 100 District of Columbia facilities by total deficiency count (highest first) - the goal is transparency, not a blacklist. Facilities appear with their deficiency total, complaint-based deficiencies (citations triggered by a formal complaint rather than the routine survey), fine dollar amounts, and CMS Health Inspection component rating. A high count can reflect a facility with genuine quality problems, a more aggressive state survey team, a larger bed count with more opportunities for citation, or a complaint spike in a single cycle, context matters. Conversely, a low count does not guarantee good care; facilities rarely surveyed, or recently surveyed with a favorable cycle, can look clean while problems accumulate between inspections. The state's benchmark of 20.8 deficiencies and the national benchmark of 9.5 (average score 73) are starting reference points.

Deficiencies are based on CMS Rating Cycle 1 (the most recent completed standard survey); prior cycles appear on each facility's detail page. Important: PlainDoctor presents CMS deficiency data exactly as published at data.cms.gov - we do not aggregate, re-rank, or editorialize. This table is a research tool, not medical advice, a consumer rating, or a legal conclusion about any facility. Selecting a nursing home for yourself or a loved one should include in-person visits, reading the underlying F-tag narratives in the full CMS-2567 survey reports, interviewing staff and current residents' families, and consulting licensed clinicians, hospital discharge planners, and elder-law advisors familiar with District of Columbia long-term care regulations.

17
Facilities
20.8
Avg Deficiencies
9.5
National Avg
73
National Avg Score

Top 100 by Deficiency Count

# Facility Deficiencies Health Rating
1 DEANWOOD REHABILITATION AND WELLNESS CENTER 45 1/5
2 CAPITOL CITY REHAB AND HEALTHCARE CENTER 41 1/5
3 SERENITY REHABILITATION AND HEALTH CENTER LLC 32 3/5
4 BRIDGEPOINT SUBACUTE AND REHAB CAPITOL HILL 31 1/5
5 WASHINGTON CTR FOR AGING SVCS 29 2/5
6 BRIDGEPOINT SUB-ACUTE & REHAB NATIONAL HARBORSIDE 29 3/5
7 STODDARD BAPTIST NURSING HOME 24 3/5
8 ASCENSION LIVING CARROLL MANOR 24 2/5
9 KNOLLWOOD HSC 19 3/5
10 UNIQUE REHABILITATION AND HEALTH CENTER LLC 19 2/5
11 INGLESIDE AT ROCK CREEK 15 3/5
12 INSPIRE REHABILITATION AND HEALTH CENTER LLC 15 2/5
13 SIBLEY MEM HOSP RENAISSANCE 12 4/5
14 FOREST HILLS OF DC 5 4/5
15 THE HSC PEDIATRIC SKILLED NURSING FACILITY 5 4/5
16 JEANNE JUGAN RESIDENCE 5 5/5
17 LISNER LOUISE DICKSON HURTHOME 4 5/5

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the average deficiency count in District of Columbia nursing homes?

Across 17 Medicare-certified facilities in District of Columbia, the average is 20.8 health inspection deficiencies per facility, compared to a national average of 9.5. The national average deficiency score is 73.

What types of deficiencies do nursing homes receive?

Deficiencies are F-tag citations issued during CMS standard surveys or complaint investigations. They range from minor paperwork issues (scope A-B) to widespread immediate-jeopardy findings (scope J-L). The severity matters more than the raw count.

How does District of Columbia compare nationally for nursing home deficiencies?

The District of Columbia average of 20.8 deficiencies per facility is above the national average of 9.5. State survey teams vary in strictness, so cross-state comparisons should be made with caution.

What should I do if a District of Columbia nursing home has many deficiencies?

Review the severity of individual citations, not just the count. Read the F-tag narratives in the CMS-2567 survey reports, tour the facility in person, interview staff and residents' families, and consult licensed clinicians or elder-law advisors familiar with the state's long-term care regulations.

Compare Deficiencies in Nearby States

Other states with deficiency data from the CMS-2567 inspection record for side-by-side context.

Compare specialties nationally →

Data from CMS Five-Star Quality Rating System, Nursing Home Provider Information (Feb 2026) (data.cms.gov). Deficiency counts drawn from Rating Cycle 1 (most recent standard survey) in the CMS-2567 record. Each facility tracked by its CCN. Methodology

Compiled from official public sources by the PlainDoctor editorial team.