COVID Visitation Information
Skilled nursing facilities are advised to refer to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Nursing Home Visitation guidance web page. Refer back to this page regularly to see updates.
Subscribe to Informational emails
A dedicated email listserv has been set up to provide interested individuals (staff, patients, families, advocates, the general public) access to information about skilled nursing facilities from the Nevada Department of Health and Human Services. This information includes guidance on regulations, medical or epidemiological issues, patient/resident care, infection control, state and federal inspection requirements and more. While information can be technical in nature, every effort is made to make it understandable to anyone. Use the links below to subscribe or unsubscribe.
- Click here to send an email for the Skilled Nursing Facilities listserv.
- Include only "subscribe NURSINGHOMES" in the body of the mail, or
- Include only "unsubscribe NURSINGHOMES" in the body of the mail.
Find a licensed skilled nursing facility
- Review the instructions below and click the button to find a licensed skilled nursing facility.
- Select "Health Facilities" from the "Business Unit" drop-down menu
- Select "Facility for Skilled Nursing" from the "Credential Type" drop-down menu
- Click "Search" to view the list or "Generate Excel" to get the list in spreadsheet for downloading, saving, and/or printing.
State Laws and Regulations
“Facility for skilled nursing” means an establishment which provides continuous skilled nursing and related care as prescribed by a physician to a patient in the facility who is not in an acute episode of illness and whose primary need is the availability of such care on a continuous basis. “Facility for skilled nursing” does not include a facility which meets the requirements of a general or any other special hospital.
Facility-Reported Incidents
Nevada-licensed skilled nursing facilities now must submit facility-reported incidents using the online form provided by the Bureau of Health Care Quality and Compliance. With the exception of any unplanned downtime or system issues, facility-reported incidents will no longer be accepted via other methods (email, fax, etc.). Facility-reported incidents submitted by any other method will be returned with instructions to use the online form.
All facilities are required to report incidents of abuse, neglect, exploitation, isolation or abandonment of older persons or vulnerable persons. Skilled nursing facilities also have other incident-reporting requirements, which are summarized at the start of the form linked below.
- Reported Incident Form for Skilled Nursing Facilities - Click here to access the online Facility-Reported Incident Form for Nevada-Licensed Skilled Nursing Facilities.
- SNF-FRI-Requirements - Click here for facility-reported incidents requirements for skilled nursing facilities.
Licensing and Applications
To apply for a license to operate a facility for skilled nursing, you must complete the following:
- Apply for a new license/renew an existing license - myhealthfacilitylicense.nv.gov
- Licensing checklist for facilities for skilled nursing
- Construction and Plan Review
- Plan review Application
- Application to permit the kitchen
- Health Laboratories and Personnel - Application to license the laboratory
- Application to permit x-ray equipment
Federal Regulations
Certification Applications
To apply for CMS certification as a facility for skilled nursing, you must provide the following:
Training & Education Opportunities
HCQC compiles an ongoing list of training and education opportunities for Nevada health facilities of all types, and adds these resources to the Training & Education web page.
"Hand in Hand: A Training Series for Nursing Homes"
This training focuses on caring for residents with dementia and on preventing abuse. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), supported by a team of training developers and subject matter experts, created this training to address the need for nurse aides’ in-service training on these important topics. Federal law requires that nurse aides complete in-service training on dementia management and resident abuse prevention. Additionally, facilities must provide dementia management and resident abuse prevention training to all facility staff, (direct and indirect care and auxiliary functions) contractors, and volunteers. For help with registration and all other technical issues, contact the ISTW Helpdesk at cmstraininghelp@hendall.com.
Apply for Civil Money Penalty Funds to Improve Patient Care
Monetary penalties collected from skilled nursing facilities for violations of federal regulations are partially reinvested by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) to support activities that benefit nursing facility residents, and that protect or improve their quality of care or quality of life. A facility or organization can apply for these funds by completing the application at the CMS Civil Money Penalty Reinvestment Resource web page (found in the "CMP Reinvestment Application Resources (Application Template and Resource Guide)" ZIP file) and submitting it to HCQC at NVHACMP@nvha.nv.gov; the CMS website also contains information about approved CMP projects from around the United States.
Video series to reduce deficiencies, improve quality of care
Check out CMS’s new "Quality in Focus" interactive video series. The series of short (10–15 minutes) videos is tailored to provider types and aims to reduce the deficiencies most commonly cited during the CMS survey process, such as infection control and accident prevention. Reducing these common deficiencies increases the quality of care for people with Medicare and Medicaid. Learn to:
- Understand surveyor evaluation criteria
- Recognize deficiencies
- Incorporate solutions into your facility’s standards of care.
Informal Dispute Resolutions (IDR)
Administrative Review Policy for Medical Facilities
Informal Dispute Resolutions (IDR) must be offered to skilled nursing facilities, intermediate care facilities and home health agencies in the course of the recertification process whenever deficiencies are cited. IDR must be offered for all deficiencies regardless of the severity and scope scores or condition level deficiencies.
An IDR process will not be offered to facility types other than skilled nursing facilities, intermediate care facilities and home health agencies. Other facility types will have an opportunity to request a hearing on appeal for deficiencies identified in a sanction notice and the prehearing will allow opportunity for informal resolution.