CareSentinel

Federal Nursing-Home Survey Record

BEND TRANSITIONAL CARE

CCN 385253 · 900 NE 27TH STREET, BEND, OR, 97701

Record as of May 2026 · Updated monthly from CMS · Data incorrect? Contact records@caregiverhelpnow.com

Does BEND TRANSITIONAL CARE have a federal violation or abuse history?

According to the public federal record on file with the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), BEND TRANSITIONAL CARE (CCN 385253), in BEND, OR, has federal inspection findings on its record.

In its current inspection cycle, CMS cited the facility for 1 deficiency; the most serious carries scope/severity E on CMS's A–L scale — CMS's "potential for harm" tier, below actual harm. The most recent federal survey on file is dated 2025-06-27. Citations from earlier inspection cycles appear in the dated timeline below as historical findings, not current ones. This page restates the federal record as published by CMS and draws no conclusion of its own. Federal nursing-home surveys are conducted on a recurring cycle by state survey agencies acting on CMS's behalf, and the figures on this page are compiled from CMS's published provider data, as on file with CMS; the federal record may understate what actually occurred, and inspection findings are point-in-time survey results, not a determination that any specific resident was harmed.

The Federal Record

The most recent federal inspection on file records no actual-harm or immediate-jeopardy citations for this facility.

Below is this facility's federal survey record as on file with CMS.

Scope & Severity — current cycle

ANo Harm
BNo Harm
CNo Harm
DPotential
EPotential
FPotential
GActual Harm
HActual Harm
IActual Harm
JImm. Jeopardy
KImm. Jeopardy
LImm. Jeopardy

CMS's own A–L scope/severity grid. Plotted cells mark this facility's most recent (current-cycle) citations, as on file with CMS.

Overall CMS star rating: this facility vs the CMS-published state average

This facility: 5  ·  CMS state average: 3.1

Side-by-side with the CMS-published Overall CMS star rating for this state. This is the government's own published state average — not a CareSentinel-computed figure or delta.

Deficiency timeline — full federal history

2025-06-27
CURRENT CYCLE
F880S/S E

Provide and implement an infection prevention and control program.

10 citations from earlier inspection cycles — historical, not current (expand)
2024-03-07
HISTORICAL
F732S/S E

Post nurse staffing information every day.

2024-03-07
HISTORICAL
F883S/S D

Develop and implement policies and procedures for flu and pneumonia vaccinations.

2023-02-10
HISTORICAL
F725S/S F

Provide enough nursing staff every day to meet the needs of every resident; and have a licensed nurse in charge on each shift.

2023-02-10
HISTORICAL
F636S/S E

Assess the resident completely in a timely manner when first admitted, and then periodically, at least every 12 months.

2023-02-10
HISTORICAL
F755S/S D

Provide pharmaceutical services to meet the needs of each resident and employ or obtain the services of a licensed pharmacist.

2023-02-10
HISTORICAL
F698S/S D

Provide safe, appropriate dialysis care/services for a resident who requires such services.

2023-02-10
HISTORICAL
F641S/S D

Ensure each resident receives an accurate assessment.

2023-02-10
HISTORICAL
F684S/S D

Provide appropriate treatment and care according to orders, resident’s preferences and goals.

2023-02-10
HISTORICAL
F686S/S D

Provide appropriate pressure ulcer care and prevent new ulcers from developing.

2023-02-10
HISTORICAL
F578S/S D

Honor the resident's right to request, refuse, and/or discontinue treatment, to participate in or refuse to participate in experimental research, and to formulate an advance directive.

Each citation below is a federal survey finding, dated and labeled with its CMS deficiency tag, as on file with CMS. Older inspection cycles are de-emphasized; only the most recent cycle is current.

Document what happened

Have a concern about care at BEND TRANSITIONAL CARE?

Share a few details to put your inquiry on file. CareSentinel is an independent service that compiles the public CMS record and does not provide legal advice. As qualified attorneys join our network in your area, one may reach out — we can’t guarantee contact yet, so we encourage you to consult a qualified attorney promptly on your own as well. There is no cost, and your information is handled with care.

Strict time limits can apply to taking legal action — consider consulting a qualified attorney promptly.

Step 1 of 3 · What happened

Your relationship to the resident
What happened? Select all that apply.

Physical injury

Skin & wounds

Medical & clinical

Safety & abuse

Loss

Something else

The resident is…