CMS State Operations Manual Appendix A — Hospital Survey Protocol

Source Record
Authority Type
Federal Regulator
Citation
CMS Pub. 100-07, State Operations Manual, Appendix A, Rev. 238 (03-20-2026)
Primary Source
https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Manuals/downloads/som107ap_a_hospitals.pdf
Source Tier
Tier 1
Confidence
HIGH
Paywalled
No
Verbatim Available
Yes
Last Verified
May 25, 2026
Verified by Trenton L. Frazer, BCE #B3413 · Board Certified Entomologist · verification methodology

Citation

CMS State Operations Manual, Publication 100-07, Appendix A — Survey Protocol, Regulations and Interpretive Guidelines for Hospitals. Rev. 238, Issued March 20, 2026. 613 pages.

What It Says (Verbatim, Where Pest-Relevant)

Definitive finding: The current CMS State Operations Manual Appendix A contains no pest-related interpretive guidance. A full-document text extraction of Rev. 238 (27,201 lines, ~1.48 million characters) followed by exhaustive case-insensitive search returns zero matches for the following terms across the entire document: “pest,” “vermin,” “rodent,” “insect,” “infestation,” “roach,” “cockroach,” “rat,” “mice,” “mouse,” or “integrated pest.”

The closest environment-sanitation language appears under A-0750 (the Infection Prevention and Control standard at §482.42):

“The hospital must provide a sanitary environment to avoid sources and transmission of infections and communicable diseases. There must be an active program for the prevention, control, and investigation of infections and communicable diseases.”

This is the only sanitation language in the entire 613-page manual. Pest control is not named.

What It Means in Plain Language

Appendix A is the operational manual surveyors use when conducting CMS validation surveys of hospitals. It contains interpretive guidance, A-tag definitions, and survey procedures for every Condition of Participation in 42 CFR Part 482. If CMS wanted surveyors to evaluate pest control as a specific compliance domain, the guidance would appear here.

It does not appear here. CMS has no pest-specific interpretive guidance for hospital surveyors in its current operational manual.

This finding materially changes the federal regulatory landscape for hospital pest control. The regulatory framework operates almost entirely by inference. Surveyors evaluating pest activity work from the umbrella “safety and well-being” language in §482.41(a) and from the “sanitary environment” language in §482.42 — both of which are general environmental quality requirements, not pest-specific mandates.

Who It Applies To

All CMS-participating hospitals during validation surveys conducted by State Survey Agencies. Deemed-status hospitals (those accredited by The Joint Commission, DNV-GL, HFAP, or CIHQ) are typically surveyed only by complaint investigation rather than routine survey.

Documentation Evidence Required

Not applicable — the manual specifies no pest-management documentation requirements.

How Surveyors Evaluate Pest Activity in the Absence of Guidance

Surveyors observing pest activity during a CMS validation survey cite the activity to the most directly applicable A-tag. In practice this means:

Severity escalation to condition-level deficiency is uncommon but documented in cases of active rodent infestation in dietary or sterile-processing areas.

Confidence Notes

HIGH confidence. Full document downloaded and text-extracted via pdfplumber. 27,201 lines / approximately 1,481,684 characters extracted across all 613 pages with zero truncation. Exhaustive case-insensitive search performed for all pest-vocabulary terms.