Research help for families worried about nursing home abuse or neglect

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California county research

Nursing home abuse lawyer help in Santa Clara County, California

Use this county page to compare local nursing homes, public CMS inspection signals, complaint deficiencies, fines, abuse-icon status, city pages, and the records families should preserve after suspected neglect or abuse.

Short answer

How should families use Santa Clara County nursing-home records?

Use the county page to identify the facility, compare nearby nursing homes, and see whether public CMS signals match the specific injury or decline. Then move quickly to resident-specific proof: care plan, incident report, hospital records, photos, witness names, and a dated timeline.

Narrow from county to city to facility
Compare public signals to the actual harm
Preserve records before explanations change

CMS-listed facilities

50

Certified beds

5114

Complaint deficiencies

33

Facilities with fines

16

Full family answer

How to use Santa Clara County nursing-home records after suspected neglect

Santa Clara County research is useful because families often know the region before they know the exact public-record trail. A loved one may have been moved between a nursing home, hospital, rehabilitation facility, assisted living setting, or emergency room. The family may remember the city or county, but not the legal business name, CMS certification number, owner, or chain. This county page narrows the search to 50 CMS-listed facilities and 13 local city groupings so families can identify the right facility and compare nearby public-record signals without guessing.

The county page should not be read as a list of accusations. It is a research map. A facility with fines, complaint deficiencies, a low inspection rating, high turnover, or an abuse icon may deserve closer review, but those fields are not a substitute for the resident chart. The key is comparison. If your loved one had a fall with fracture, look for accident-prevention, supervision, transfer, medication, and post-fall response records. If the issue was a pressure injury, look for skin checks, turning records, incontinence care, nutrition, hydration, wound measurements, and treatment orders. If the issue was sepsis, compare early symptoms, vital signs, infection notes, physician notification, antibiotics, labs, and hospital transfer timing.

County-level research can also show whether the family is dealing with an isolated facility question or a broader local pattern. For example, repeated complaint deficiencies across several nearby homes may suggest that families in the area are using state complaint systems. A cluster of one-star inspection ratings may make families more cautious when comparing facility explanations. Ownership or chain information can help identify related entities, admission documents, and where records may be kept. Still, public patterns only help when they illuminate the resident-specific event. A good county page should always lead back to the resident's timeline.

Families should preserve proof before memories fade. Write down the first warning sign, the date staff were told, what staff said, when the doctor or family was notified, whether the resident went to the hospital, what the hospital diagnosed, and what changed after the event. Save photos, texts, voicemail, portal messages, care-plan meeting notes, discharge papers, medication lists, wound-care orders, and names of roommates or visitors who saw the condition. If the facility uses phrases like found on floor, condition deteriorated, refused care, no family notified, missed treatments, or care plan not followed, those phrases should be compared with the care plan and the hospital records.

The cited sources on this county page are meant to give families multiple angles. CMS data gives the facility-level map. Federal standards explain what topics families should ask about: resident rights, freedom from abuse and neglect, person-centered care planning, quality of care, nursing services, medications, and infection control. California complaint and ombudsman sources explain where families can ask for oversight or advocacy. Medical evidence sources explain why warning signs such as wounds, falls, infections, choking, dehydration, poor hygiene, and medication changes may require specific records. Legal sources help families understand why public cases are only comparisons and why admission paperwork, deadlines, authority to act, causation, and damages still matter.

The practical takeaway is simple: use the county page to find the facility, then build the resident file. Do not wait for a perfect legal theory. Families can ask for help once there is a serious injury or decline, a concerning timeline, inconsistent explanations, missing records, delayed treatment, or public facility history that seems to match the event. The goal is not to accuse every facility in Santa Clara County. The goal is to help one family understand what happened to one resident and preserve enough evidence for a meaningful review.

How families should use this Santa Clara County page

County pages are useful when your family knows the region but still needs to identify the exact facility, compare nearby nursing homes, or understand whether local public records show patterns that match the resident's injury.

Public record data points

Public CMS signals in Santa Clara County

Use these county-level numbers after you identify the facility and injury timeline. They are context, not conclusions.

County facilities

50

CMS-listed nursing homes grouped in this county.

City pages

13

Local city research paths inside this county.

Certified beds

5114

Total certified beds across the county facility set.

Complaint signals

33

Facilities with recent complaint-related health deficiencies.

Facilities with fines

16

Facilities where CMS lists one or more fines.

One-star inspections

9

Facilities with a one-star CMS health inspection rating.

County record context

Care standards and medical sources for Santa Clara County families

County pages should help families move from local public records to the specific care, injury, and documentation questions that credible sources support.

AHRQ pressure injury prevention resources

Pressure injuries and wound deterioration

Pressure injuries are patient-safety events that require risk assessment, prevention planning, skin checks, repositioning, nutrition, moisture management, and prompt treatment when skin breaks down.

Ask for skin assessments, Braden-style risk scores if used, turning and repositioning records, wound measurements, wound photos, treatment orders, nutrition records, infection notes, and transfer records.

Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality

CDC STEADI fall-prevention resources

Falls, fractures, and unwitnessed injuries

Fall prevention in older adults focuses on identifying risk factors, medications, gait and balance issues, prior falls, vision, cognition, environmental hazards, and follow-up after a fall.

Ask for fall-risk assessments, care-plan interventions, bed or chair alarm records, toileting plans, transfer assistance orders, incident reports, witness statements, and hospital imaging.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

CDC sepsis information

Infection, sepsis, and delayed escalation

Sepsis is a life-threatening emergency connected to infection. Older residents may decline quickly, and the key records often involve vital signs, symptoms, labs, cultures, treatment timing, and transfer decisions.

Ask for vital-sign sheets, fever notes, wound or UTI documentation, respiratory symptoms, lab results, physician notifications, antibiotic orders, and the time staff first considered hospital transfer.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Federal pharmacy services rule

Medication errors and chemical-restraint concerns

Medication issues can involve wrong dose, missed dose, failure to monitor high-risk drugs, contraindications, unnecessary medications, or psychotropic drugs used inappropriately.

Ask for medication administration records, physician orders, pharmacy reviews, psychotropic consent and monitoring, blood sugar logs, INR or anticoagulant monitoring, seizure-medication levels, and adverse-event notes.

Electronic Code of Federal Regulations

Report a problem to FDA

Medication adverse-event and product-problem reporting

FDA provides public pathways for reporting problems involving drugs, biologics, medical devices, foods, cosmetics, and other regulated products, including adverse events and product quality concerns.

Use this when a medication error, adverse drug event, drug mix-up, labeling issue, or possible product problem needs to be separated from the nursing home's own medication-administration records.

U.S. Food and Drug Administration

Federal quality-of-care rule

Malnutrition, dehydration, and weight loss

Nutrition and hydration concerns often require comparing resident risk, weight records, intake monitoring, supplements, feeding assistance, swallowing issues, labs, and care-plan compliance.

Ask for weight logs, meal intake, fluid intake, diet orders, supplement orders, speech therapy notes, feeding-assistance records, labs, and notes explaining any significant decline.

Electronic Code of Federal Regulations

Federal resident-rights and quality-of-care rules

Hygiene, toileting, incontinence care, and dignity

Basic daily care can affect dignity, skin integrity, infection risk, continence, comfort, and preventable decline. Toileting and hygiene concerns should be compared with the resident's care plan and daily-care documentation.

Ask for toileting plans, shower sheets, bathing records, bowel logs, brief-change records if kept, skin checks, call-light records if available, care-plan revisions, physician notification, and family-notification notes.

Electronic Code of Federal Regulations

42 C.F.R. § 483.10

Resident rights

Federal nursing-home rules address resident dignity, self-determination, access to information, visitation, grievances, and participation in care planning.

Use this when the issue involves ignored family questions, restricted access, missing information, retaliation concerns, or a resident who was not treated with dignity.

Electronic Code of Federal Regulations

42 C.F.R. § 483.12

Freedom from abuse, neglect, and exploitation

Federal rules prohibit abuse, neglect, exploitation, and misappropriation of resident property, and require facilities to develop policies for prevention, reporting, and investigation.

Use this when the concern involves physical abuse, sexual abuse, staff violence, resident-on-resident assault, unexplained injuries, neglect, or a report that was not handled seriously.

Electronic Code of Federal Regulations

42 C.F.R. § 483.21

Comprehensive person-centered care planning

Federal rules require comprehensive care plans based on resident assessments, with services designed to meet medical, nursing, mental, and psychosocial needs.

Use this when a facility says an injury was unavoidable. Ask what the care plan required before the incident and what changed afterward.

Electronic Code of Federal Regulations

42 C.F.R. § 483.25

Quality of care

Federal quality-of-care rules address a facility's obligation to provide care and services that help residents attain or maintain their highest practicable well-being.

Use this for falls, pressure injuries, nutrition, hydration, mobility decline, infection concerns, avoidable pain, or a sudden change that staff did not escalate.

Electronic Code of Federal Regulations

42 C.F.R. § 483.35

Nursing services

Federal rules require sufficient nursing staff and licensed nursing services to meet resident needs based on resident assessments and care plans.

Use this when records mention short staffing, unanswered call lights, missed turning, missed toileting, delayed response, or no one watching a high-risk resident.

Electronic Code of Federal Regulations

Cities in Santa Clara County

Facility profiles in Santa Clara County

San Jose, CA

A GRACE SUB ACUTE & SKILLED CARE

1250 S. WINCHESTER BOULEVARD

Overall 4 · Deficiencies 14 · Beds 166

San Jose, CA

ALMADEN HEALTH AND REHABILITATION CENTER

2065 LOS GATOS-ALMADEN ROAD

Overall 4 · Deficiencies 9 · Beds 77

Campbell, CA

BAYWOOD POST ACUTE

238 VIRGINIA AVENUE

Overall 3 · Deficiencies 13 · Beds 45

Campbell, CA

CAMDEN POSTACUTE CARE, INC

1331 CAMDEN AVENUE

Overall 3 · Deficiencies 16 · Beds 60

Mountain View, CA

CAMINO RIDGE POST-ACUTE

1949 GRANT ROAD

Overall 2 · Deficiencies 29 · Beds 102

San Jose, CA

CANYON SPRINGS POST-ACUTE

180 NORTH JACKSON AVENUE

Overall 4 · Deficiencies 17 · Beds 199

Sunnyvale, CA

CEDAR CREST NURSING AND REHABILITATION CENTER

797 E FREMONT AVENUE

Overall 4 · Deficiencies 15 · Beds 99

Campbell, CA

CHILDRENS HC ORG NO CA -PEDIATRIC HOSPITAL D/P SNF

3777 SOUTH BASCOM AVENUE

Overall 5 · Deficiencies 5 · Beds 27

Saratoga, CA

CHILDRENS HC ORG NO CA SARATOGA PEDIATRIC SUBACUTE

13425 SOUSA LANE

Overall 5 · Deficiencies 4 · Beds 37

San Jose, CA

COURTYARD CARE CENTER

340 NORTHLAKE DRIVE

Overall 4 · Deficiencies 14 · Beds 76

San Jose, CA

CREEKSIDE POST-ACUTE

3580 PAYNE AVENUE

Overall 4 · Deficiencies 6 · Beds 130

Cupertino, CA

CUPERTINO HEALTHCARE & WELLNESS CENTER

22590 VOSS AVENUE

Overall 2 · Deficiencies 16 · Beds 170

San Jose, CA

EMPRESS CARE CENTER, LLC

1299 S. BASCOM AVENUE

Overall 3 · Deficiencies 13 · Beds 67

Gilroy, CA

GILROY HEALTHCARE CENTER

8170 MURRAY AVENUE

Overall 2 · Deficiencies 18 · Beds 134

Cupertino, CA

HEALTH CARE CTR AT THE FORUM AT RANCHO SAN ANTONIO

23600 VIA ESPLENDOR

Overall 4 · Deficiencies 16 · Beds 48

San Jose, CA

HERMAN HEALTH CARE CENTER

2295 PLUMMER AVENUE

Overall 1 · Deficiencies 25 · Beds 99

Sunnyvale, CA

IDYLWOOD CARE CENTER

1002 W. FREMONT AVENUE

Overall 5 · Deficiencies 11 · Beds 185

San Jose, CA

INSPIRE BEHAVIORAL HEALTH

401 RIDGE VISTA AVENUE

Overall 2 · Deficiencies 11 · Beds 116

San Jose, CA

LINCOLN GLEN SKILLED NURSING

2671 PLUMMER AVENUE

Overall 5 · Deficiencies 11 · Beds 59

Los Altos, CA

LOS ALTOS POST-ACUTE

809 FREMONT AVENUE

Overall 4 · Deficiencies 5 · Beds 152

Milpitas, CA

MILPITAS CARE CENTER

120 CORNING AVENUE

Overall 2 · Deficiencies 18 · Beds 35

San Jose, CA

MISSION DE LA CASA

2501 ALVIN AVENUE

Overall 2 · Deficiencies 16 · Beds 163

Morgan Hill, CA

MORGAN HILL HEALTHCARE CENTER

530 WEST DUNNE AVENUE

Overall 4 · Deficiencies 8 · Beds 52

Mountain View, CA

MOUNTAIN VIEW HEALTHCARE CENTER

2530 SOLACE PLACE

Overall 3 · Deficiencies 24 · Beds 129

San Jose, CA

O'CONNOR HOSPITAL D/P SNF

2105 FOREST AVENUE

Overall 5 · Deficiencies 2 · Beds 24

Morgan Hill, CA

PACIFIC HILLS POST ACUTE

370 NOBLE COURT

Overall 4 · Deficiencies 16 · Beds 99

Palo Alto, CA

Palo Alto Post-Acute

911 BRYANT STREET

Overall 4 · Deficiencies 17 · Beds 66

San Jose, CA

PLUM TREE CARE CENTER

2580 SAMARITAN DRIVE

Overall 5 · Deficiencies 11 · Beds 76

San Jose, CA

SAN JOSE HEALTHCARE & WELLNESS CENTER

75 N. 13TH STREET

Overall 3 · Deficiencies 12 · Beds 58

Santa Clara, CA

SANTA CLARA POST ACUTE

991 CLYDE AVENUE

Overall 3 · Deficiencies 16 · Beds 201

Saratoga, CA

SARATOGA RETIREMENT COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTER

14500 FRUITVALE AVENUE

Overall 5 · Deficiencies 1 · Beds 94

San Jose, CA

SKYLINE HEALTHCARE CENTER - SAN JOSE

2065 FOREST AVENUE

Overall 1 · Deficiencies 19 · Beds 253

Los Gatos, CA

STONEBROOK HEALTH AND REHABILITATION

350 DE SOTO DRIVE

Overall 5 · Deficiencies 15 · Beds 73

Cupertino, CA

SUNNY VIEW MANOR

22445 CUPERTINO ROAD

Overall 5 · Deficiencies 4 · Beds 48

Sunnyvale, CA

SUNNYVALE GARDENS POST ACUTE

1150 TILTON DRIVE

Overall 3 · Deficiencies 17 · Beds 140

Sunnyvale, CA

SUNNYVALE POST-ACUTE CENTER

1291 S BERNARDO AVENUE

Overall 1 · Deficiencies 28 · Beds 99

San Jose, CA

THE REDWOODS POST-ACUTE

1267 MERIDIAN AVENUE

Overall 3 · Deficiencies 9 · Beds 152

San Jose, CA

THE RIDGE POST ACUTE

1355 CLAYTON ROAD

Overall 5 · Deficiencies 9 · Beds 54

Los Altos, CA

THE TERRACES AT LOS ALTOS HEALTH FACILITY

373 PINE LANE

Overall 5 · Deficiencies 11 · Beds 30

Los Gatos, CA

THE TERRACES OF LOS GATOS

800 BLOSSOM HILL ROAD

Overall 5 · Deficiencies 0 · Beds 59

Saratoga, CA

THE VILLAS AT SARATOGA SKILLED NSG & ASSISTED LVG

20400 SARATOGA-LOS GATOS RD

Overall 2 · Deficiencies 29 · Beds 86

Santa Clara, CA

THE WIN POST-ACUTE

410 NORTH WINCHESTER BOULEVARD

Overall 5 · Deficiencies 11 · Beds 133

Los Gatos, CA

VASONA CREEK HEALTHCARE CENTER

16412 LOS GATOS BOULEVARD

Overall 3 · Deficiencies 8 · Beds 148

Palo Alto, CA

VI AT PALO ALTO

600 SAND HILL ROAD

Overall 5 · Deficiencies 5 · Beds 44

Mountain View, CA

VILLA SIENA

1855 MIRAMONTE AVENUE

Overall 3 · Deficiencies 11 · Beds 30

San Jose, CA

VISTA MANOR NURSING CENTER

120 JOSE FIGUERES AVENUE

Overall 5 · Deficiencies 4 · Beds 99

Palo Alto, CA

WEBSTER HOUSE

437 WEBSTER STREET

Overall 5 · Deficiencies 2 · Beds 145

San Jose, CA

WESTWOOD POST ACUTE

1601 PETERSEN AVENUE

Overall 2 · Deficiencies 26 · Beds 258

San Jose, CA

WHITE BLOSSOM CARE CENTER

1990 FRUITDALE AVENUE

Overall 3 · Deficiencies 17 · Beds 153

Los Gatos, CA

WOODLANDS HEALTHCARE CENTER

14966 TERRENO DE FLORES LANE

Overall 5 · Deficiencies 3 · Beds 65

Records to review first in this county

These profiles have stronger CMS follow-up signals. They are not accusations; they are starting points for public-record review.

Official California and federal sources

These links are starting points. Public facility data should be compared with the resident chart, hospital records, photos, family timeline, and any state complaint or ombudsman records.

Legal research context

Legal sources to keep beside the county records

Public legal examples and consumer legal guides help explain why resident-specific proof, admission paperwork, authority to act, and deadlines still matter.

Health and Hospital Corp. of Marion County v. Talevski

Resident-rights claims can involve federal law

The Supreme Court addressed whether provisions of the Federal Nursing Home Reform Act could support a federal civil-rights claim against a public nursing facility.

This does not mean every nursing-home injury is a federal case. It shows why resident-rights statutes and facility ownership can matter in legal analysis.

U.S. Supreme Court / Oyez

Health and Hospital Corp. of Marion County v. Talevski

Primary Supreme Court opinions should anchor case-law research

The Court's opinion is the primary legal source for the Talevski resident-rights decision, which addressed whether certain Federal Nursing Home Reform Act rights could be enforced through a civil-rights claim.

Use the opinion as the anchor source, then use Oyez, SCOTUSblog, Justia, or FindLaw only to help translate the issue into plain English.

U.S. Supreme Court

Kindred Nursing Centers, L.P. v. Clark

Admission paperwork can affect where a dispute is heard

The Supreme Court addressed arbitration agreements signed with nursing-home admission documents.

Families should save admission papers, powers of attorney, arbitration agreements, consent forms, and facility contracts before a lawyer evaluates options.

U.S. Supreme Court / Oyez

Kindred Nursing Centers L.P. v. Clark

Arbitration clauses can change the path of a nursing-home claim

The official opinion explains why a state rule singling out arbitration agreements for special treatment conflicted with the Federal Arbitration Act.

If your admission packet contains an arbitration agreement, save it. A lawyer may need to evaluate who signed it, what authority they had, and whether the agreement affects court, arbitration, or settlement strategy.

U.S. Supreme Court

Questions and lawyer connection

If your gut says something is wrong, listen to it.

You do not need perfect records to start. Ask our AI general questions, then we can help connect you with the right lawyer in your area if a free consultation makes sense.

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