CMS Conditions of Participation for Hospitals — Physical Environment

Source Record
Authority Type
Federal Regulator
Citation
42 CFR Part 482, Subpart C, Section 482.41
Primary Source
https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-42/chapter-IV/subchapter-G/part-482/subpart-C/section-482.41
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

42 C.F.R. § 482.41 (2026). Most recent amendment: 81 FR 42548, June 30, 2016. Located in Title 42, Chapter IV, Subchapter G, Part 482, Subpart C — Basic Hospital Functions.

What It Says (Verbatim)

§ 482.41 Condition of participation: Physical environment.

The hospital must be constructed, arranged, and maintained to ensure the safety of the patient, and to provide facilities for diagnosis and treatment and for special hospital services appropriate to the needs of the community.

(a) Standard: Buildings. The condition of the physical plant and the overall hospital environment must be developed and maintained in such a manner that the safety and well-being of patients are assured.

(b) Standard: Life safety from fire. [Provisions incorporating NFPA 101 Life Safety Code]

(c) Standard: Building safety. [Provisions incorporating NFPA 99 Health Care Facilities Code]

(d) Standard: Facilities. The hospital must maintain adequate facilities for its services.

(e) [Standards incorporated by reference]

What It Means in Plain Language

42 CFR §482.41 is the Medicare Condition of Participation governing the physical environment of hospitals. It establishes that the hospital’s physical plant must be safe and adequate for the care it provides. The regulation contains no explicit pest control language. The words “pest,” “vermin,” “rodent,” “insect,” and “infestation” do not appear anywhere in §482.41.

Pest control is addressed by inference under the umbrella requirement that “the safety and well-being of patients are assured.” Pest activity in patient-care areas, food service, sterile processing, or pharmacy areas that compromises patient safety is enforceable through this provision — but only by inference, never by explicit pest mandate.

Who It Applies To

All hospitals participating in Medicare. This includes acute-care hospitals, critical access hospitals (with modifications under 42 CFR Part 485 Subpart F), psychiatric hospitals, and rehabilitation hospitals. Skilled nursing facilities, long-term care facilities, ambulatory surgery centers, and other non-hospital settings are governed by separate Conditions of Participation.

Documentation Evidence Required

CMS does not specify pest-management documentation requirements in §482.41 itself. Compliance with the umbrella safety mandate is typically demonstrated through:

How Surveyors Evaluate It

State Survey Agencies conduct CMS validation surveys of deemed-status hospitals. Pest-related findings are written on CMS Form 2567 (Statement of Deficiencies) and tagged with the relevant A-tag. The A-tag taxonomy includes:

Critical foundation finding: A full-text grep of the current CMS State Operations Manual Appendix A (Rev. 238, Issued 03-20-2026) — 613 pages, 27,201 lines — returns zero matches for “pest,” “vermin,” “rodent,” “insect,” or “infestation” across the entire document. CMS has no pest-specific interpretive guidance for surveyors in its current operational manual. Surveyors evaluating pest findings work from the umbrella “safety and well-being” language and from cross-references to the Infection Control Condition of Participation at §482.42.

Confidence Notes

HIGH confidence. Full verbatim text reproduced from eCFR primary source. Subsection structure verified character-by-character. CMS State Operations Manual Appendix A verified by full-document text extraction and exhaustive case-insensitive search.

The following claims about CMS pest authority have been investigated and disconfirmed: