GoodStanding

Nursing home report

CORTLAND PARK REHABILITATION AND NURSING CENTER

CORTLAND, NY · Medicare-certified · 120 beds

In good standing
For-profitChain member
3 of 5 overall

3 of 5 stars overall. Health inspections are 3 of 5 stars, staffing is lower at 2 of 5 stars with 3.07 hours per resident per day versus the 4.1 federal benchmark, quality measures are 2 of 5 stars, and there were $0 fines in the last 24 months; recent inspection citations included pressure ulcer care, medication labeling/storage, and resident safety/cleanliness.

Facility ratings

Health inspections

Staffing

3.073 hrs/resident/day

Quality measures

Last inspection: May 30, 2025Penalties, last 24 months: $0

Federal guidance recommends at least 4.1 nursing hours per resident each day. This facility reports 3.073.

Staffing detail

Registered nurses
0.33
Licensed practical nurses
0.94
Nurse aides
1.80
Weekend nursing
2.54

Hours per resident per day.

Total staff turnover: 62%
Registered nurse turnover: 63%

Resident outcomes

How often residents experience these outcomes, with the direction over the past year.

Long-stay residents on antipsychotic medication

20.5%Improving

Residents with a fall causing major injury

2.7%Steady

Residents with pressure ulcers (bedsores)

4.8%Worsening

Residents with a urinary tract infection

0.3%Improving

Residents who lost too much weight

8%Improving

Residents who were physically restrained

0%Steady

Residents needing more help with daily activities

17.1%Worsening

Residents whose ability to walk got worse

14.2%Worsening
Show all measures

Long-stay residents on antianxiety or sleep medication

23.4%Worsening

Short-stay residents newly given an antipsychotic

0.8%Improving

Residents with a long-term catheter

0.3%Improving

Residents with new or worsening incontinence

22.4%Worsening

Residents with depressive symptoms

0.3%Improving

Long-stay residents given the seasonal flu vaccine

88.1%Steady

Long-stay residents given the pneumonia vaccine

61.6%Worsening

Short-stay residents given the seasonal flu vaccine

47.7%Steady

Short-stay residents given the pneumonia vaccine

38.5%Improving

What the inspectors found

The nursing home failed to provide proper pressure ulcer care and failed to prevent new pressure sores from developing. Cited May 2023 — isolated incident, actual harm.

View the original federal record

F-Tag 686 — 42 CFR §483.25(b) — S/S: G

The home failed to properly label and securely store medications and biologicals. Cited May 2025 — limited pattern, potential for harm.

View the original federal record

F-Tag 761 — 42 CFR §483.45(g) — S/S: E

The home failed to ensure residents had a safe, clean, comfortable, homelike environment and daily care supports were provided safely. Cited October 2023 — limited pattern, potential for harm.

View the original federal record

F-Tag 584 — 42 CFR §483.10 — S/S: E

The nursing home failed to keep the area free of hazards and provide enough supervision to prevent accidents. Cited May 2023 — limited pattern, potential for harm.

View the original federal record

F-Tag 689 — 42 CFR §483.25(d) — S/S: E

The nursing home failed to provide and carry out an infection prevention and control program to help keep residents from getting or spreading infections. Cited May 2021 — limited pattern, potential for harm.

View the original federal record

F-Tag 880 — 42 CFR §483.80(a) — S/S: E

Recent history

  1. STAFFING

    Reported nurse staffing was below the federal recommendation of 4.1 hours per resident per day.

  2. INSPECTION

    Health inspection found 3 health deficiencies.

    See what inspectors found
  3. INSPECTION

    Health inspection found 1 health deficiency.

    See what inspectors found
  4. INSPECTION

    Health inspection found 7 health deficiencies.

    See what inspectors found

Operator & ownership

Ownership
For profit - Partnership
Chain
Part of UPSTATE SERVICES GROUP · 17 homes · 1.9 stars avg
Occupancy
114.7 residents on an average day (96% of 120 beds)
Resident voice
Resident council
Medicare history
Certified for 59 years

Things at a nursing home change — inspections, staffing, ownership, news.

Source: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services — public records, updated monthly. GoodStanding presents official records with plain-language summaries. Always visit a facility in person.