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ADVANCED HEALTH CARE OF COLORADO SPRINGS

COLORADO SPRINGS, CO · El Paso County · For profit - Limited Liability company · 34 certified beds

📍 55 S Parkside Dr, Colorado Springs, CO 80910  ·  📞 (719) 418-4500

Medicare ID: 065407  ·  Last Medicare inspection: Aug 15, 2024

Overall Safety Score
93
out of 100
Strong Safety Record
Component Scores
100
Inspection
100
Staffing
✓ Clean
Enforcement
✓ None
Complaints
50
Quality
📋 Last inspected: August 15, 2024 📦 CMS data as of: June 2026

Score Breakdown

Inspection
100
Staffing
100
Enforcement
100
Complaints
100
Quality Outcomes
50

What the numbers mean

ADVANCED HEALTH CARE OF COLORADO SPRINGS scored 93 out of 100 — 29 points above the state average of 64.

📋 Inspections: 13 citations over the last 36 months — 12 fewer than the state average (25). None were rated as causing actual harm to residents. 2 findings recurred across inspection cycles — indicating a problem that was not fixed.

👥 Staffing: Staffing levels are strong — RN hours and total nurse hours per resident are in the favorable range. Adequate staffing is one of the most important factors in resident safety.

⚖️ Penalties & enforcement: No significant federal fines or enforcement actions on record — a positive indicator of consistent regulatory compliance.

💬 Complaints: Low complaint activity — few formal complaints from residents or families have triggered inspections. Ask if there is a family council you can speak with.

⚠️ Resident quality outcomes: Some quality measures are below national benchmarks. Areas like fall prevention, pain management, or medication use may warrant closer attention.

🔍 Most cited areas: The facility did not fully protect higher-risk rooms or equipment areas, such as storage, laundry, kitchens, or other spaces where fire could start or spread faster., The facility had a problem with corridor doors, smoke doors, or hallway barriers that are supposed to slow smoke and fire spread so residents have time to evacuate or shelter safely., The facility had a problem with sprinkler coverage, maintenance, testing, or outage procedures. Sprinklers are a key fire-protection system that help control fires before residents are in danger.. The full report provides the complete citation record with dates, severity levels, and plain-English descriptions.

What inspectors found (last 3 surveys)

13
Total citations
State avg: 24.9
0
Serious (G+)
State avg: 1.5
2
Repeat findings

Top concern areas

4
Hazardous Areas & Fire Risks
The facility did not fully protect higher-risk rooms or equipment areas, such as storage, laundry, kitchens, or other spaces where fire could start or spread faster.
2
Fire Doors & Corridors
The facility had a problem with corridor doors, smoke doors, or hallway barriers that are supposed to slow smoke and fire spread so residents have time to evacuate or shelter safely.
2
Fire Sprinkler System
The facility had a problem with sprinkler coverage, maintenance, testing, or outage procedures. Sprinklers are a key fire-protection system that help control fires before residents are in danger.

⚖ Penalties & Enforcement

Federal civil monetary penalties (CMPs) are only issued after a facility has failed two levels of regulatory review — meaning problems were found on inspection and the facility could not rebut the findings. This is a serious escalation beyond a standard citation.

No federal penalties on record. CMS has not issued civil monetary penalties or payment denials against this facility in the current reporting period.
📋 Enforcement Context Analysis
Clean enforcement record — No significant federal enforcement actions or fines on record for this facility. This is a positive indicator.
✅ No enforcement actions on record. This facility's enforcement score of 100/100 reflects a clean enforcement history in the current CMS reporting cycle.

📅 Per-action enforcement detail is drawn from the CMS enforcement dataset; none is currently on file for this facility.

🩹

Resident Wellbeing — Key Indicators

These are the measures families ask about most. They come from CMS clinical assessments of every resident — not just inspection reports. Stars (★) count toward the official CMS quality star rating.

Re-hospitalized after discharge
22.4% lower is better
How often short-stay residents who went home ended up back in the hospital within 30 days. Risk-adjusted for resident health.
Hospitalization rate
7.3% lower is better
How often long-stay residents were hospitalized over the past year. Adjusted for how sick residents were.

Source: CMS MDS Quality Measures & Medicare claims data. Scores shown are the most recent 4-quarter averages for long-stay residents.

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What to know about Advanced Health Care Of Colorado Springs

Advanced Health Care Of Colorado Springs is a Medicare-certified nursing home in Colorado Springs, Co with 34 certified beds. Its current Senior Care Report Card score is 93/100, placing it in the Strong Safety Record range. The latest CMS survey date in our data is Aug 15, 2024. Over the last 36 months, our CMS citation data shows 13 citations and 2 repeat findings. Families comparing this facility should pay close attention to quality outcomes before scheduling a tour or accepting placement. Ownership type on file: For profit - Limited Liability company.

Overall Assessment — Strong Safety Record  ·  93/100
This facility has a strong inspection and compliance record — a good starting point for families.
What to do next: Recommended for consideration. Still visit in person and speak with current residents and family members.

What this facility's data shows

📋 Inspections
Inspection record is above average — few deficiencies, no serious findings.
👥 Staffing
Staffing levels are adequate — RN hours and nurse-to-resident ratios meet or exceed benchmarks.
⚖ Penalties
No significant federal enforcement actions or fines in the record.
💬 Complaints
Complaint activity is low — few formal complaints filed by residents or families.
Multiple quality measures are below national benchmarks. Ask management directly about resident care practices.
Score breakdown — the numbers behind this assessment
👥 Staffing 100
What it measures RN hours per resident per day, total nurse hours, and RN turnover rate.
💡 Understaffing is the strongest single predictor of poor inspection outcomes.
📋 Inspection 100
What it measures Number, severity (A–L), and scope of deficiencies found. Repeat findings carry extra weight.
💡 Every citation in Section D feeds directly into this score.
⚖ Penalties 100
What it measures Whether CMS escalated from a deficiency citation to actual financial or operational sanctions.
💡 A penalty means the facility already failed a second level of regulatory review.
💬 Complaints 100
What it measures Volume of complaint-triggered inspections and the share that were substantiated.
💡 Complaint surveys are unannounced — they often surface issues annual surveys miss.
🎯 Quality outcomes 50
What it measures Resident outcome measures: falls, pressure ulcers, antipsychotic use, weight loss, hospitalizations.
💡 Reflects the lived experience of residents beyond what inspectors observe.

Each pillar scores 0–100 and is combined into the overall score. A strong overall can mask a weak pillar — compare all four and see how they stack against the state average in Section B.

🏗 How This Facility Compares to CO State Averages

Comparing a facility to others in the same state puts its score in context. A facility might have 8 citations and that could be above average in one state and below in another. Green means this facility is doing better than its peers; red means it's falling short.

Metric This facility CO avg vs. State
Overall score
The combined Senior Care Report Card score out of 100.
93 64 ▲ Better than state avg
Inspection score
How well the facility performs on standard health surveys.
100 49 ▲ Better than state avg
Staffing score
RN hours, total nurse hours, and staff turnover from CMS payroll data.
100 59 ▲ Better than state avg
Penalty score
Fines, payment denials, and enforcement actions on file.
100 60 ▲ Better than state avg
Complaint score
Volume of complaint surveys and substantiated complaints.
100 88 ▲ Better than state avg
Quality score
Resident clinical outcomes vs national benchmarks: falls, antipsychotics, pain, vaccination, hospitalizations.
50 68 ▼ Worse than state avg
Citations (3 yrs)
Total number of deficiencies cited in the last 36 months.
13 24.9 ▲ Better than state avg
Serious citations
Citations rated severity G or higher (actual harm or immediate jeopardy).
0 1.5 ▲ Better than state avg

📅 Inspection Timeline

State health inspectors visit nursing homes on a regular cycle — typically every 12 to 15 months — and document every deficiency they find. The timeline below shows the date and scale of each inspection visit over the past several years. A pattern of worsening surveys is a red flag even if the most recent visit looks clean.

2024-08-15
13 citations
2023-03-16
6 citations
2021-12-16
4 citations

Bar length proportional to citation count. Red = serious findings (severity G+). Orange = elevated. Green = low.

📄 Full Citation Record

Every time state inspectors visit a nursing home, they write up anything that doesn’t meet federal standards. Each write-up is called a citation.

Each citation shows what the problem was and how serious it was, using a color-coded badge:

Confused by codes like F0732 or K0363? Use the free inspection report decoder to understand F-tags, fire-safety K-tags, severity letters, and repeat findings. Get the decoder →
Green — No residents harmed Yellow — Risk of harm, no injury Orange — A resident was harmed Red — Life or safety in danger

A Repeat tag means the same problem appeared in a previous inspection — it was not fully corrected the first time. Citations shown cover the last two years.

Survey: 2024-08-15 13 citation(s)
K0918 No harm, could worsen
Electrical safety: essential electrical system maintenance
Electrical safety: essential electrical system maintenance. This is a building, fire protection, emergency preparedness, or electrical-safety issue found during a CMS life-safety inspection. Families should ask what was repaired, when it was corrected, and whether staff were retrained.
K0346 No harm, could worsen
Fire safety: fire alarm out of service procedures
Fire safety: fire alarm out of service procedures. This is a building, fire protection, emergency preparedness, or electrical-safety issue found during a CMS life-safety inspection. Families should ask what was repaired, when it was corrected, and whether staff were retrained.
K0363 No harm, could worsen
Fire safety: corridor doors must close and latch
Fire safety: corridor doors must close and latch. This is a building, fire protection, emergency preparedness, or electrical-safety issue found during a CMS life-safety inspection. Families should ask what was repaired, when it was corrected, and whether staff were retrained.
K0354 No harm, could worsen
Fire safety: sprinkler system out of service procedures
Fire safety: sprinkler system out of service procedures. This is a building, fire protection, emergency preparedness, or electrical-safety issue found during a CMS life-safety inspection. Families should ask what was repaired, when it was corrected, and whether staff were retrained.
K0353 No harm, could worsen
Fire safety: sprinkler system maintenance and testing
Fire safety: sprinkler system maintenance and testing. This is a building, fire protection, emergency preparedness, or electrical-safety issue found during a CMS life-safety inspection. Families should ask what was repaired, when it was corrected, and whether staff were retrained.
K0321 No harm, could worsen
Fire safety: hazardous rooms and storage areas
Fire safety: hazardous rooms and storage areas. This is a building, fire protection, emergency preparedness, or electrical-safety issue found during a CMS life-safety inspection. Families should ask what was repaired, when it was corrected, and whether staff were retrained.
K0511 No harm, could worsen
Fire safety: gas, electric and utility systems
Fire safety: gas, electric and utility systems. This is a building, fire protection, emergency preparedness, or electrical-safety issue found during a CMS life-safety inspection. Families should ask what was repaired, when it was corrected, and whether staff were retrained.
K0324 No harm, could worsen
Fire safety: cooking equipment and kitchen protection
Fire safety: cooking equipment and kitchen protection. This is a building, fire protection, emergency preparedness, or electrical-safety issue found during a CMS life-safety inspection. Families should ask what was repaired, when it was corrected, and whether staff were retrained.
K0291 No harm, could worsen
Fire safety: hazardous areas must be protected
Fire safety: hazardous areas must be protected. This is a building, fire protection, emergency preparedness, or electrical-safety issue found during a CMS life-safety inspection. Families should ask what was repaired, when it was corrected, and whether staff were retrained.
K0355 No harm, could worsen
Fire safety: portable fire extinguishers
Fire safety: portable fire extinguishers. This is a building, fire protection, emergency preparedness, or electrical-safety issue found during a CMS life-safety inspection. Families should ask what was repaired, when it was corrected, and whether staff were retrained.
K0223 No harm, could worsen
Fire safety: doors must resist smoke and fire spread
Fire safety: doors must resist smoke and fire spread. This is a building, fire protection, emergency preparedness, or electrical-safety issue found during a CMS life-safety inspection. Families should ask what was repaired, when it was corrected, and whether staff were retrained.
K0781 No harm, could worsen
Fire safety: special hazard protection systems
Fire safety: special hazard protection systems. This is a building, fire protection, emergency preparedness, or electrical-safety issue found during a CMS life-safety inspection. Families should ask what was repaired, when it was corrected, and whether staff were retrained.
K0907 No harm, could worsen
K0907
Fire and life safety requirement. This is a building, fire protection, emergency preparedness, or electrical-safety issue found during a CMS life-safety inspection. Families should ask what was repaired, when it was corrected, and whether staff were retrained.
🩹

How Are Residents Doing?

Inspections tell you whether a facility followed the rules. These measures tell you how residents actually fared — whether they fell, experienced pain, lost weight, or were over-medicated. CMS collects this data through regular clinical assessments that nurses complete for every resident. Unlike inspections, which happen once a year, these assessments happen continuously.

✓ Positive signal: Most star-rated quality measures for this facility are within a good range, suggesting residents\' day-to-day wellbeing compares favorably to typical nursing homes.

How to read these cards: Each card shows one measure. Lower percentages are better for most (e.g. fewer falls), but higher is better for vaccination rates and community return. ★ Star rating marks measures CMS uses in its official quality star rating.

Short Stay Residents — 2025Q1-2025Q4
★ Star rating
Worsening depression symptoms
0.6% lower is better
Share of long-stay residents whose depression got measurably worse over the past year — despite being in a care facility.
Percentage of short-stay residents assessed and a…
94.6% lower is better
Percentage of short-stay residents assessed and appropriately given the pneumococcal vaccine
Emergency room visits (short-stay)
94.6% lower is better
Share of short-stay residents sent to the ER during their recovery stay. ER visits are disruptive for recovering patients and sometimes avoidable with better on-site clinical management.

Source: CMS MDS Quality Measures (2025Q1-2025Q4). Collected via standardized clinical assessments — not inspector visits.

🏥

Hospitalization & ER Visits

These numbers come directly from Medicare claims — real billing records of every time a resident was hospitalized or sent to the emergency room. They\'re among the most objective measures of care quality because they can\'t be influenced by how a facility writes up an assessment. The adjusted score is the most meaningful number — it\'s been corrected to account for how sick residents were, so a facility treating frailer patients isn\'t unfairly penalized.

What to look for: An adjusted score significantly above the expected score means this facility hospitalizes residents more often than peer facilities with similar patient populations — that gap is worth asking about directly.

Short Stay Residents — 20241001-20250930
★ Star rating
Re-hospitalized after going home
22.4% risk-adjusted rate
Actual: 22.6% Expected: 24.1%
About the same as similar facilities
How often short-stay residents who went home ended up back in the hospital within 30 days. A high rate suggests residents were discharged before they were ready, or that the facility didn't coordinate follow-up care well. Risk-adjusted so facilities treating sicker residents aren't unfairly penalized.
★ Star rating
Hospitalization rate (long-stay)
7.3% risk-adjusted rate
Actual: 7.0% Expected: 10.8%
✓ Better than expected for similar residents
How often long-stay residents were hospitalized over the past year, adjusted for how ill they were. A high rate relative to expectations suggests the facility may be sending residents to the hospital for issues that skilled nursing staff should be able to manage on-site.

Source: CMS Medicare claims data. Scores are risk-adjusted — they account for how ill residents were when admitted so facilities treating sicker populations aren\'t penalized for it.

💬 Questions to Ask Before Touring

These questions are generated specifically from this facility's score profile and citation history — not a generic checklist. A facility's willingness to answer them openly, and the quality of their answers, is itself an important signal. Bring this list when you tour or call.

  1. Some resident outcome measures are below average here. What is your current approach to fall prevention, pain management, and quarterly medication review?
  2. Can we speak privately with two or three current residents or their families?

👪 Family Decision Guide

This guide translates this facility's data into practical next steps for families. It is not a recommendation for or against placement — it is a structured framework for the conversations you need to have before making a decision.

✓ Positives to confirm

  • Inspection record is above average — verify improvements are maintained
  • Staffing levels appear adequate — ask about weekend and night coverage
  • No significant penalty history — a positive indicator of consistent compliance
  • Low complaint activity — ask if there is a family council you can speak with
  • No serious-harm citations (G+) in the public record
  • No pattern of repeat violations detected

⚠ Areas to probe

  • Always speak with at least two current residents or family members independently

📈 Score History

The score is recalculated every time CMS releases updated data (typically monthly). A consistent downward trend is more concerning than a single low score. An improving trend after a period of poor performance may indicate management changes are taking effect. Use the free facility-watch form above to get email alerts when this facility's record changes materially.

2026-06-27
93 — Excellent

🏢 Ownership & Operators

Ownership matters because large corporate chains sometimes prioritize cost controls over care quality. CMS requires every nursing home to disclose its owners, operators, and managing employees. Frequent ownership changes can disrupt staffing and operations — which is why we flag facilities that changed ownership in the past 12 months.

🔗 THE KAREN GAIL MILLER IRREVOCABLE TRUST FOR THE BENEFIT OF KAREN R. WI operates 25 facilities across CO, KS, UT, NV, AZ, NM, ID, OH, TN, CA. This is a large operator — consider researching their overall network quality.
Owner / Operator Role Ownership % Effective
THE KAREN GAIL MILLER IRREVOCABLE TRUST FOR THE BENEFIT OF KAREN R. WI Organization 1970-01-01
KAREN GAIL MILLER IRREV TR FBO ZANE MILLER Organization 1970-01-01
ADVANCED HEALTH CARE - LARRY H MILLER CORPORATION Organization 1970-01-01
THE KAREN GAIL MILLER IRREVOCABLE TRUST FOR THE BENEFIT OF STEPHEN F. Organization 1970-01-01
LHMSH LLC Organization 1970-01-01
THE G&H MILLER UTAH TRUST DATED FEBRUARY 26, 2019 Organization 1970-01-01
BECKMAN, ROBERT Individual 1970-01-01
NEW AHC HOLDINGS, LLC Organization 1970-01-01
THE GAIL MILLER GST TRUST Organization 1970-01-01
THE BRYAN MILLER UTAH DYNASTY TRUST DATED APRIL 22, 2014 Organization 1970-01-01
CANO, RUTH Individual 1970-01-01
THE KAREN GAIL MILLER IRREVOCABLE TRUST FOR THE BENEFIT OF ROGER L. MI Organization 1970-01-01
OXNAM, NATHAN Individual 1970-01-01

🔔 Monthly tracking is now free

We check CMS data monthly. Use the tracking form above and we will email you when new citations appear, scores change, or enforcement actions are added.

📋
Monthly report update
New citation alerts
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Score trend tracking
🏠 Verify this data on Medicare.gov
All data in this report comes from the CMS Care Compare database. You can review the official public record directly on Medicare.gov — including the full inspection narrative, star ratings, and any recent enforcement actions.
View on Medicare.gov ↗

This report reflects publicly available CMS data only and is updated monthly. Severity codes and narratives are reproduced directly from the CMS health inspection database. Senior Care Report Card scores are independently computed and are not affiliated with or endorsed by CMS or Medicare.gov.

Frequently asked questions

What is the Senior Care Report Card safety score for Advanced Health Care Of Colorado Springs?
Advanced Health Care Of Colorado Springs has an independently computed Safety Score of 93 out of 100, based on CMS inspection findings, staffing levels, penalty history, complaint volume, and quality measures.
Where is Advanced Health Care Of Colorado Springs located?
Advanced Health Care Of Colorado Springs is located in Colorado Springs, CO. View the full address, phone number, and a map at the top of this report.
How many beds does Advanced Health Care Of Colorado Springs have?
Advanced Health Care Of Colorado Springs is certified for 34 beds in the CMS Care Compare dataset.
When was the most recent CMS health inspection at Advanced Health Care Of Colorado Springs?
The most recent CMS health inspection summarized in this report was completed on August 15, 2024. CMS publishes a new inspection cycle approximately every 12 months.
What does the Senior Care Report Card Safety Score measure?
The Safety Score (0-100) combines five public-data signals: CMS health inspection severity, nursing staffing hours per resident, civil monetary penalties, complaint counts, and quality measures. Methodology and weightings are documented at /how-it-works/.
Is the report on Advanced Health Care Of Colorado Springs affiliated with the facility?
No. This report is independently computed from public CMS Care Compare data and is not affiliated with Advanced Health Care Of Colorado Springs, CMS, or Medicare.gov. It is provided as a research aid for families.

Data source: CMS Care Compare · Methodology · State Ombudsman

This report uses public CMS nursing home data and simplified scoring to help families ask better questions. It is not a recommendation, ranking, medical opinion, legal opinion, or substitute for an in-person visit. Source data last published by CMS: June 25, 2026.