Matador Health And Rehabilitation Center
805 HARRISON ST, Matador, TX, 79244
Federal Quality Data
Official records from CMS Care Compare — reported by the facility and audited by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. We present them unmodified. Refreshed March 2026.
CMS Star Ratings
Facility & Staffing
- Ownership
- For profit - Corporation
- Certified beds
- 50 · avg 31 residents/day
- Total nursing staff turnover
- 21.7% — lower than most Texas nursing homesTexas avg: 51.5% · National avg: 46.4% · per CMS Care Compare
- Administrators who left
- 0 departed — near the Texas averageTexas avg: 0.6 · National avg: 0.5 · per CMS Care Compare
State licensing & capacity
- License number
- 149665
- Service type
- Medicare/medicaid
- Licensed capacity
- 50 beds
- Bed type breakdown
- 15 Medicare-only · 35 Medicaid/Medicare
- Current license effective
- April 1, 2024
- Current license expires
- April 1, 2027
- Initial license date
- April 3, 2007
Texas HHS licensing registry · as of April 16, 2026
Ownership & operations
- Licensee
- Childress County Hospital District (HOSPITAL DISTRICT/AUTHORITY)
- Operator / manager
- Lubbock Operating Company Llc
- Administrator
- Jordan Moeller
Texas HHS licensing registry · as of April 16, 2026
About this community
Matador Health and Rehabilitation Center is a 50-bed Medicare/Medicaid nursing home in Matador, TX, licensed to and operated under a hospital district authority. CMS rates it 4 stars overall, with 4 stars each on health inspections and staffing. The quality-measures rating is 3 stars overall, with long-stay outcomes rated 2 stars. The facility is currently running at about 62% of its licensed beds, with 30 of 50 occupied on an average day.
Written from CMS Care Compare and state licensing records · last updated April 19, 2026
What the data says
CMS rates staffing here at 4 stars — roughly the top 9% of Texas nursing homes on staffing. Each resident receives about 265 minutes of nursing care per day, compared to 241 minutes at the 4-star threshold statewide. The staffing hours per resident run higher than what the resident mix alone would require, meaning the staff-to-resident ratio is more favorable than the raw minutes suggest on their own.
About 2 in 10 nursing staff left in the past year. Texas nursing homes at the 25th percentile — better than roughly three-quarters of facilities in the state — turn over at a 42% annual rate; this facility's 21.7% rate sits well below that. A long-stay resident here is unlikely to cycle through multiple primary caregivers in a single year.
The overall CMS rating is 4 stars, but the quality-measures score is 3 stars, and long-stay outcomes specifically rate 2 stars. That means the facility performs well on staffing and inspections, while documented resident outcomes for people living there long-term rank below most peers in Texas.
The facility is operating at about 62% of its 50 licensed beds — roughly 30 residents on an average day. That figure is low relative to typical occupancy levels.
Written from CMS Care Compare and state licensing records · last updated April 19, 2026
Questions to ask when you tour
Long-stay outcome measures
CMS rates long-stay quality measures 2 stars — ask which specific measures are below average and what steps are underway to address them.
Why occupancy is low
With about 30 of 50 beds filled, ask whether the open capacity reflects a recent admission slowdown, staffing constraints, or a deliberate operating decision.
Weekend staffing levels
Reported weekend nursing hours run to 3.7 hours per resident per day, noticeably below the 4.4 hours reported on weekdays — ask how care coverage is structured on Saturdays and Sundays.
RN presence on the floor
Reported RN hours come to about 24 minutes per resident per day; ask how many hours a registered nurse is physically on-site and who covers clinical decisions overnight.
Resident Council activity
The facility has a Resident Council but no Family Council — ask how family members formally raise concerns and how often the Resident Council meets.
Management company's role
Day-to-day operations are handled by Lubbock Operating Company LLC under a hospital district license — ask what decisions rest with local management versus the operating company.
Where this information comes from
- License, capacity, ownership, administrator: Texas HHS licensing registry, snapshot as of April 16, 2026.
- Star ratings, staffing, fines, deficiencies: CMS Care Compare, processed March 1, 2026.
- Summary, insights, and tour questions: Written from the state licensing and CMS records above, last updated April 19, 2026.
Read our methodology for how this information is collected and verified.