NM · Fonteum Federal Healthcare Data
Federal CMS records for New Mexico nursing homes: health deficiency citations, daily nurse staffing hours (PBJ), and PECOS ownership disclosures. All figures trace to a source row, a snapshot date, and a federal statute.
Deficiency Citations
1,000
CMS NH Health Citations
Facilities Cited
22
Distinct CCNs with citations
SNF Enrollments
—
PECOS-enrolled SNFs
Staffing Days Loaded
1,000
PBJ facility-day records
| CCN | Facility Name | City | Citations |
|---|---|---|---|
| 325047 | Casa De Oro Center | Las Cruces | 101 |
| 325036 | Las Palomas Center | Albuquerque | 91 |
| 325038 | Casa Real | Santa Fe | 88 |
| 325039 | Calibre Post Acute, LLC | Las Cruces | 88 |
| 325043 | Casa Arena Healthcare LLC | Alamogordo | 87 |
| 325037 | Ladera Center | Albuquerque |
| Staff Category | New Mexico Avg | National Avg | Δ vs National |
|---|---|---|---|
| RN (Direct Care) | 0.46 | 0.38 | +0.08 |
| CNA | 1.50 | 2.32 | -0.82 |
Source: CMS Payroll-Based Journal (PBJ) Daily Nurse Staffing. National averages from CMS Five-Star PY2023 staffing methodology. HPRD = total hours ÷ daily resident census.
No PECOS enrollment data loaded for New Mexico yet.
Source: CMS PECOS SNF All Owners (ACA Section 6101; 42 CFR § 424.516). Ownership percentage: 25.0 = 25%. Role codes 34/35 = direct/indirect ownership ≥ 5%.
Download the complete New Mexico nursing home deficiency, staffing, and ownership records as JSON or CSV with field-level provenance headers.
Data is federal public-domain (17 U.S.C. § 105). Fonteum adds normalized CCN keys, field-level provenance, and snapshot attestation. No trust claims made — data quality reflects CMS source fidelity. Methodology · All States · Full Deficiencies Dataset
| 72 |
| 325042 | Uptown Rehabilitation Center | Albuquerque | 70 |
| 325033 | Rio Rancho Center | Rio Rancho | 68 |
| 325044 | Spring River Rehabilitation and Care Center | Roswell | 60 |
| 325030 | Santa Fe Care Center | Santa Fe | 56 |
Source: CMS NH Health Deficiency Citations (Provider Data Catalog r5ix-sfxw). Higher citation counts reflect more survey findings, not necessarily worse outcomes — survey intensity varies by state.