How to Prepare Your Assisted Living Community for a State Survey
Autumn McKinnell
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5 minute read
State surveys don't announce themselves. In most states, assisted living communities receive no advance notice. Surveyors arrive unannounced, and your team has minutes, not days, to respond. The communities that come through surveys without deficiencies aren't the ones scrambling when surveyors walk in the door. They're the ones already ready.
This guide covers exactly how to prepare: the documentation you need organized, the processes you need documented, the staff conversations you need to have in advance, and how ECP's platform makes survey readiness a byproduct of normal operations.
What Surveyors Are Looking For
State surveyors check whether your community complies with your state's assisted living regulations across four core areas:
- Resident care — care plans, service plans, assessments, incident documentation
- Medication management — MAR accuracy, physician orders, pharmacy integration, controlled substance logs
- Staffing — training records, staff-to-resident ratios, background check documentation
- Facility operations — policies and procedures, infection control logs, physical plant inspections
Documentation requests come fast. Surveyors will ask for resident records, MAR histories, incident reports, and staff files within the first hour. If your documentation system makes any of those requests a scramble, that's where deficiency risk lives.
Step 1: Define What's in the Resident's Chart
Before your next survey, your team needs to agree on what constitutes the official resident record and what doesn't. This matters because surveyors will ask for the chart, and what you hand them becomes the basis for their review.
What typically belongs in the chart:
- Face sheet (demographics, emergency contacts, insurance)
- Current service plan and care plan
- Physician orders (current and historical)
- MAR records (current month and prior 12 months)
- Vital signs logs
- Nursing notes and clinical observations
- Incident reports
- DNR status and advance directives
What may or may not belong (clarify with your state):
- Internal supervisor notes and coaching documentation
- Communication logs between staff and family
- Staff observations that aren't part of formal care documentation
Document your community's data policy in writing. ECP lets communities organize records by chart type so surveyors can access exactly what they need without navigating through internal working documents.
Step 2: Document Your Survey Response Process
Every person on your leadership team should know exactly what to do when surveyors arrive. Document this process now, before you need it:
- Who gets notified first? Define the chain: administrator, DON, director on duty.
- Who serves as the surveyor liaison? Designate one person to accompany surveyors and respond to requests.
- How do you grant surveyor access to your EHR/eMAR? In ECP, you can configure a read-only surveyor access role in advance. Test it before you need it.
- Where do surveyors work? Designate a private space with access to your records system.
- What printed reports will you provide? Identify the standard report set in ECP that covers common surveyor requests: MAR summaries, incident logs, service plan exports, and physician order histories.
Communities that have this documented and practiced can respond to surveyor requests in minutes. Communities that don't spend the first hour searching for login credentials and printer paper.
Step 3: Make Sure Your Documentation Is Current
Surveyors verify that what's in the chart matches what's happening on the floor. Common gaps that generate deficiencies:
- Service plans not updated after a status change. Ensure necessary service plan updates were made when resident status or level of care changes occurred.
- Physician orders with updated prescriptions. Every order on file should be current and renewed upon prescription expiration.
- MAR records with incomplete documentation. Every medication administration, including refused, late, and PRN doses, must have a timestamped, attributed entry.
- Incident reports without documented follow-up. Review post-fall notifications to physicians, families, and/or supervisors to ensure response to incidents follows company policy.
ECP's compliance dashboard gives administrators and DONs a real-time view of documentation completeness across all residents. You can identify incomplete service plans, overdue orders, and MAR gaps without pulling individual records manually.
Step 4: Prepare the Data Surveyors Always Request
Every state survey will involve requests for resident records. Have these ready to produce on the spot:
- Current MAR (full month)
- Historical MARs (prior 12 months)
- Physician Orders
- Service Plan / Care Plan
- Incident Reports
- Vital Signs History
- DNR / Advance Directives
- Face Sheet
ECP supports bulk printing of resident records, so if a surveyor asks for multiple residents at once, you're not printing one file at a time.
Step 5: Stay Ready Instead of Getting Ready
The communities that do best in surveys aren't the ones that prepare hardest the week before. They're the ones where survey readiness is built into daily operations.
What that looks like in practice:
- Daily MAR completion review. DON or charge staff reviews eMAR completion each morning, not just when a survey is imminent.
- Monthly service plan audits. Review all service plans monthly for documentation currency. Flag any resident with a status change in the past 30 days.
- Quarterly mock survey drills. Run through the surveyor request process with your leadership team every quarter. Time how long it takes to produce standard documentation packages.
- Incident report follow-up tracking. Every incident report in ECP should have a documented follow-up action in accordance with company policy.
Communities that operate at survey-readiness every day don't face the scramble that produces rushed documentation and compliance gaps under pressure.
How ECP Supports Survey Readiness
ECP is used by more than 8,500 assisted living communities nationwide, including communities in states with the most rigorous survey programs. The platform is designed so that the documentation surveyors ask for comes out of how your team works every day, not a separate preparation project.
Capabilities directly relevant to survey readiness:
- MAR documentation your surveyors expect — every administration is timestamped, attributed to a specific staff member, and includes exception documentation for refused, late, and held doses
- Configurable surveyor access roles — grant read-only access to your EHR/eMAR without sharing administrative credentials
- Compliance dashboards — real-time visibility into documentation gaps before surveyors find them
- Incident tracking with follow-up workflows — ensures every incident has a documented notification, response, and care plan update
- Physician order management — digital orders stay current, removing the expired-order risk that paper systems create
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: How much notice do assisted living communities get before a state survey?
A: In most states, none. Assisted living surveys are generally unannounced. A small number of states allow limited notice for specific survey types, but standard annual surveys typically arrive without warning.
Q:What are the most common assisted living survey deficiencies?
A: Medication management is consistently the leading source of deficiencies nationally. That means MAR documentation gaps, expired physician orders, and missing exception documentation for missed or refused doses. Service plan currency and staff training records are also frequent findings.
Q: Can ECP generate the documentation package surveyors ask for?
A: Yes. ECP includes standard reporting templates for the document sets surveyors commonly request: MAR summaries, physician order histories, incident logs, vital signs reports, and service plan exports. Bulk printing supports multi-resident requests.
Q: How often should assisted living communities do internal survey preparation reviews?
A: Best practice is monthly documentation audits plus quarterly mock surveys where leadership runs through the surveyor response process start to finish. Communities that do this consistently rarely get caught off guard.
Q: What's the difference between a state survey and a complaint investigation in assisted living?
A: A standard state survey is a periodic compliance review covering all regulated areas. A complaint investigation is triggered by a specific allegation and stays narrowly focused on that finding. Both are unannounced in most states, and both involve records requests. Your survey readiness process covers both.
ECP is the leading all-in-one software provider for senior living communities, offering eMAR, EHR, CRM, Move-Ins, Billing and Insights. Designed to enhance resident care, staff efficiency, and operational success, ECP's technology is trusted by over 8,500 communities nationwide. With a commitment to seamless integrations and data accessibility, ECP is making senior living software simpler and smarter.
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