You just got cited.
Let's fix it.
A free survey-response toolkit for SNF administrators, DONs, and consultants. Drop a CMS-2567, get a state-customized Plan of Correction drafted to CMS's four-element schema in minutes — referencing 6,200 real surveys from 41 states.
Three tools, one workflow.
Draft a Plan of Correction
Drop a 2567 PDF. Get a state-customized POC for every cited F-tag, structured to CMS S&C Letter 13-21's four required elements.
An IJ Removal Plan, fast.
Cited at Immediate Jeopardy? Generate the removal-plan structure CMS expects within 24 hours, with the five required parts.
The F-tag library.
24 most-cited F-tags in plain English, with real survey examples, common gotchas, and what surveyors look for.
From cited to submitted in under 10 minutes.
Built on real accepted POCs, not generic templates.
The drafter retrieves the closest-matching accepted Plans of Correction from our corpus — same F-tag, same severity, same state when possible — and uses them as patterns. You get drafts that read like a senior consultant wrote them, because they're modeled on consultants who did.
State-specific. Where CMS ends, state survey agencies begin.
Every state has its own POC review nitpicks: California rejects vague monitoring, Pennsylvania scrutinizes care plan timelines, Washington wants explicit QAPI tie-in. Pick your state and the drafter applies the right rules.
Your data stays on your computer.
The 2567 PDF is parsed in the browser using pdf.js. The text is sent only to our API when you click "Draft POC" — and we never store the deficiency narrative, just your email and facility name for follow-up.
Free to use. Built by a nurse.
The Nursing Directory was founded by Jayson — a former bedside RN. This toolkit is the side of survey response that consulting firms charge $50,000 for. We make it free because every nurse deserves to know what surveyors are looking for.
"There are 16,000 nursing facilities in the U.S. Every one of them gets surveyed annually. The difference between a clean POC and a rejected one is whether you know the four elements CMS requires. Now you know."
— The Nursing Directory