Survey Deficiency: Definition and Healthcare Context
Full name: CMS Health Survey Deficiency Citation
A survey deficiency is a finding recorded by a state survey agency during an on-site inspection of a Medicare- or Medicaid-certified health care facility indicating that the facility failed to meet a specific federal Condition of Participation or Requirement of Participation. For nursing homes, deficiencies are catalogued using F-tags — federal regulatory tags identifying the specific regulatory requirement violated. Each deficiency is assigned a scope (isolated, pattern, or widespread) and severity (potential for minimal harm, minimal harm, actual harm, or immediate jeopardy), which together determine the enforcement remedies CMS may apply. Deficiency data is published on CMS Care Compare and drives the Health Inspections component of nursing home star ratings.
How it’s used
- CMS Care Compare (nursing homes): deficiency citations — including F-tag, scope, severity, and correction status — are published on Care Compare and constitute the Health Inspections domain of the nursing home five-star rating.
- Fonteum NH Deficiency & Harm Rate study: 418,148 deficiency citations across 14,635 facilities are analyzed in Fonteum's nursing home deficiency research at /research/nursing-home-deficiency-harm-rate-2026, revealing that 5.59% of citations reach actual-harm severity (scope G or higher).
- Fonteum NH Penalties Enforcement study: deficiency citations at actual-harm or immediate-jeopardy severity levels are cross-referenced with civil money penalty records to measure CMS enforcement response rates.
Frequently asked questions
- What is a survey deficiency in a nursing home?
- A survey deficiency is a citation issued by a state health surveyor when a nursing home is found to be out of compliance with a federal Requirement of Participation under 42 CFR Part 483.
- How are deficiencies scored?
- Each deficiency is assigned a scope (isolated, pattern, widespread) and a severity level (potential for minimal harm through immediate jeopardy). The combination determines the scope-and-severity letter designation (A through L).
- What happens when a nursing home receives a deficiency?
- The facility must submit a Plan of Correction to the state agency. Depending on severity, CMS may also impose remedies such as civil money penalties, denial of payment for new admissions, or temporary management.