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Capstone Healthcare Of Perryton

3101 S. MAIN ST., Perryton, TX, 79070

Type
Nursing home
State-licensedCMS certified · CCN 675954

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.

Full report →

CMS Star Ratings

Overall5/5
Health inspections4/5
Staffing5/5
Quality measures2/5

Facility & Staffing

Ownership
For profit - Corporation
Certified beds
60 · avg 21 residents/day
Total nursing staff turnover
38.5%lower than most Texas nursing homesTexas avg: 51.5% · National avg: 46.4% · per CMS Care Compare
Administrators who left
0 departednear the Texas averageTexas avg: 0.6 · National avg: 0.5 · per CMS Care Compare

Enforcement & Citations

Infection control citations
1

State licensing & capacity

License number
311748
Service type
Medicare/medicaid
Licensed capacity
60 beds
Bed type breakdown
21 Medicare-only · 39 Medicaid/Medicare
Current license effective
January 1, 2025
Current license expires
January 1, 2028
Initial license date
September 1, 1971

Texas HHS licensing registry · as of April 16, 2026

Ownership & operations

Licensee
Capstoneperryton Opco Llc (Limited Liability Company (LLC))
Operator / manager
Capstone Hc Management Llc
Administrator
Vanessa Sanchez

Texas HHS licensing registry · as of April 16, 2026

About this community

Capstone Healthcare of Perryton is a 60-bed nursing home in Ochiltree County, Texas, accepting Medicare and Medicaid. CMS rates it 5 stars overall, with 5-star staffing and a 4-star health inspection score. The quality-measures rating is 2 stars. The facility is currently operating at about 35% of licensed capacity, with roughly 21 residents per day.

Written from CMS Care Compare and state licensing records · last updated April 19, 2026

What the data says

CMS rates staffing here at 5 stars — the top 2% of Texas nursing homes on staffing. Each resident receives about 299 minutes of nursing care per day, well above the 241-minute threshold for a 4-star-staffing facility in Texas. The resident mix here requires less hands-on care than at a typical facility, so those hours stretch further than the raw minutes suggest.

About 4 in 10 nursing staff left in the past year. That figure sits below Texas's 25th-percentile cutoff — better than roughly three-quarters of nursing homes in the state.

The 2-star quality-measures rating covers outcomes like pressure wounds, falls, and pain management for long-stay residents. The facility holds 5-star staffing alongside this 2-star outcome score.

The facility is running at approximately 35% of its 60 licensed beds — about 21 residents on an average day. That level of low occupancy at a facility with otherwise strong staffing and turnover numbers is a concrete fact worth exploring.

Written from CMS Care Compare and state licensing records · last updated April 19, 2026

Questions to ask when you tour

  1. Reason for low occupancy

    With only about 21 residents in a 60-bed facility, ask what is driving the low census and whether the current staffing levels are expected to hold as occupancy changes.

  2. Quality-measures rating explained

    CMS rates outcomes 2 stars despite 5-star staffing — ask specifically which quality measures are below average and what steps the clinical team has taken in response.

  3. Staffing continuity on weekends

    Weekend nursing hours are reported at 4.1 minutes per resident per day, compared to 5.0 on weekdays — ask how staffing is structured on Saturdays and Sundays.

  4. Registered nurse coverage

    RN hours average about 40 minutes per resident per day — ask how many hours per day a registered nurse is physically on-site and who covers clinical decisions overnight.

  5. Resident Council activity

    The facility has a Resident Council but no Family Council — ask how families are formally notified of care changes and how they can raise concerns between scheduled meetings.

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.