The DON who runs the strongest building isn’t the one who works the longest hours. She’s the one who walks in every morning already knowing exactly which residents need the most attention, where risk is building, and what her team needs to do before the first crisis finds them.
I want to talk to you like a colleague, not a consultant. Because I’ve been in enough buildings to know what a Director of Nursing’s morning actually looks like — and it rarely looks like the version described in the policy manual.
Most DONs walk in and immediately start reacting. A call-out on second shift. A family complaint from overnight. A physician callback that didn’t happen. A fall that needs an investigation. Before 8 AM, the day has already owned you. And somewhere in that chaos, the residents who were quietly trending toward a rehospitalization, a wound complication, or a citation-worthy incident didn’t get the early attention that would have changed the outcome.
That is not a work ethic problem. I want to be direct about that. The DONs I’ve seen struggle with this are some of the hardest-working people in healthcare. The problem is structural. They are walking into buildings without a pre-built intelligence picture of what happened overnight and what today’s highest risks actually are. They are managing from memory, from verbal report, and from whatever shows up loudest first.
The strongest DONs I know have made one shift that changed everything: they built a daily report rhythm that gives them clinical command of the building before the building gets clinical command of them. Here is exactly what that looks like — report by report.
The 7 reports every DON should review before 9 AM
Report 01 · First Priority
Hospital Readmission Risk Report
This is the single highest-stakes report in your building because it connects clinical signals to financial consequences in real time. A readmission does not just hurt a resident — it triggers a $15,000–$21,767 cost cascade, moves your SNF VBP score, and puts your referral relationships at risk. The DON who sees readmission risk forming at 7 AM has a real chance to change the outcome. The DON who finds out at 8 PM when the ambulance is already called does not.
What you need to see: Which residents are in their highest-risk window right now, ranked by composite signal — new admissions within 72 hours, recent vital sign drift, appetite decline, behavioral changes, new antibiotics, missed medications, therapy tolerance drop, and prior hospitalization history. Not one signal. All of them, combined into a ranked priority list.
VBP Measure 1 | F689 | SNFRM | Referral protection


Report 02 · Infection Surveillance
Daily Infection & HAI Risk Report
Healthcare-Associated Infections resulting in hospitalization is now a scored VBP measure beginning FY 2026. That means an infection your building acquired — a UTI, a respiratory infection, a wound infection — that sends a resident to the hospital is now both a clinical failure and a reimbursement penalty. And the signals that precede most infections are documented in your EMR 24 to 48 hours before the clinical picture becomes obvious.
What you need to see: New PRN antibiotic starts, elevated temperatures across units, behavioral changes that could indicate early infection in cognitively impaired residents, urinalysis orders, residents with known infection risk factors who have had recent changes in condition, and any unit-level clustering of symptoms that could indicate a developing outbreak rather than isolated cases.
VBP Measure 2 | F880 | HAI hospitalization | NHSN
Report 03 · Staffing Intelligence
Acuity-Matched Staffing & Coverage Report
A full schedule on paper that doesn’t match the acuity distribution in your building is an F725 citation waiting to happen — and a VBP exposure you may not see for months. CMS is now scoring Total Nursing Hours per Resident Day through Payroll-Based Journal data, which means your staffing decisions today are being recorded and compared to national benchmarks in real time. But the deeper risk is operational: if your highest-acuity residents are on the unit with the newest agency nurses, you have set up a preventable incident regardless of what the schedule looks like.
What you need to see: Which units are carrying the highest-acuity resident load today, which shifts are covered by agency or float staff versus experienced unit nurses, whether your most experienced RNs are deployed to your highest-risk areas, and whether any units are operating below the staffing level that matches current resident complexity.
VBP Measure 3 | F725 | PBJ compliance | Acuity alignment


Report 04 · Incident & Abuse Prevention
Overnight Incident & High-Risk Behavioral Alert Report
F600 and F609 are not random. They form from patterns — behavioral escalation, unexplained injuries, shift-based incident concentrations — that are visible in the data before they become a surveyor’s finding. The DON who reviews overnight incidents every morning is not just doing due diligence. She is running an active early-warning system against Immediate Jeopardy. Under the new 75% Health Inspection scoring rule, one IJ-level finding can move your entire star rating more than two years of clean operations.
What you need to see: Every incident logged since your last review with full timestamp and notification status, any F609 reporting clock that is currently running and its deadline, behavioral escalation patterns by resident and by unit over the past 48 hours, residents with two or more incidents in the last 30 days, and any injury of unknown origin that requires investigation tracking.
F600 | F609 | IJ prevention | 5-Star Health Inspection
Report 05 · Assessment Accuracy
MDS Accuracy & Documentation-Reality Gap Report
An inaccurate MDS is not just a compliance problem. Under PDPM, every dollar of reimbursement you are entitled to is built on the accuracy of your resident assessments. If a high-acuity resident is coded as lower complexity than they actually are, you are both under-reimbursed and under-resourced for their care. If the clinical picture documented in nursing notes doesn’t match what the MDS reflects, you have a documentation-reality gap that a surveyor will find before your MDS coordinator does.
What you need to see: Residents whose recent incident history, diagnoses, or therapy utilization don’t align with their current assessment coding, any upcoming MDS completion deadlines at risk of missing accuracy requirements, outliers where nursing documentation and MDS coding are telling different stories, and residents whose care plan hasn’t been updated to reflect recent changes in condition.
F641 | PDPM accuracy | MDS compliance | Revenue protection


Report 06 · Wound & Skin Integrity
Pressure Injury & Wound Trajectory Report
Pressure injuries begin forming up to five days before they are visible — and once a Stage 3 or Stage 4 develops in your building, the clinical, legal, and survey consequences are severe. CMS citations related to pressure injuries can carry significant financial penalties, and litigation exposure in this area has produced verdicts in the hundreds of millions of dollars. A daily wound trajectory report is not a reactive tool. It is a prevention system for the residents most at risk before the skin breaks.
What you need to see: Every resident with an active wound and its current trajectory — improving, stable, or declining. Residents with new or increasing repositioning refusals. Residents whose mobility scores, nutrition status, or moisture exposure create elevated pressure injury risk. Any wound that has changed stage since the last assessment. Residents newly admitted with hospital-acquired wounds that need aggressive prevention protocols immediately.
F686 | F314 | Litigation prevention | Wound prevention
Report 07 · Turnover & Continuity
Staff Continuity & Turnover Risk Report
CMS now scores Total Nursing Staff Turnover as a VBP measure. But the operational risk runs deeper than the metric. When the nurses who know your highest-acuity residents are the ones leaving — and new or agency staff fill those positions — the early warning system breaks down. An experienced nurse catches the subtle behavioral change that precedes a UTI. A new nurse documents it as routine. That gap is where avoidable transfers, missed citations, and preventable incidents live. Turnover is not an HR metric. It is a clinical safety indicator.
What you need to see: Which high-acuity residents have had three or more different primary nurses in the last two weeks. Which units are running with the highest percentage of agency or float coverage. Residents whose care plans were recently updated but whose primary nurse has since changed. Any early resignation signals — PTO patterns, reduction in shifts — that could disrupt continuity before leadership can plan for it.
VBP Measure 4 | F725 | Care continuity | PBJ

The hard truth about manual chart review: If a DON is building these seven reports by hand — scrubbing the EMR, pulling MAR data, cross-referencing staffing sheets — she is spending 3 to 4 hours every morning on intelligence gathering instead of intervention. That is $15,000+ per year in labor cost on reporting alone, before you count what gets missed while she’s looking. And it doesn’t scale. It doesn’t run on weekends. It doesn’t survive a high-census week or a key staff call-out. The goal is not for the DON to work harder. The goal is for the DON to walk in every morning already knowing.

What changes when the DON starts every day with clarity
I want you to picture what the morning huddle looks like when the DON walks in with a pre-built risk picture already in hand. She is not asking the overnight supervisor to remember what happened. She is not waiting for verbal report to tell her which residents drifted. She already knows. She already has a prioritized list. The morning huddle takes 12 minutes instead of 45. Every nurse knows exactly which two or three residents need the most eyes today. Interventions get assigned before rounds, not after a crisis prompts them.
That is not a hypothetical. That is what daily data-driven clinical leadership actually looks like in the buildings that are consistently reducing rehospitalizations, protecting their survey position, and holding onto their referral relationships. They are not working harder than the buildings struggling beside them. They are seeing earlier. And in post-acute care, seeing earlier is the only form of prevention that actually works.
The DON who walks in already knowing is running the building. The DON who walks in finding out is being run by it. The difference between those two buildings is not effort. It is the quality and speed of the information reaching the person responsible for acting on it.
The morning checklist that protects everything: Before 9 AM, a DON with the right daily reports has already identified the three residents most likely to be hospitalized today. She has checked every F609 reporting clock still running. She knows which unit has the worst acuity-staffing mismatch. She has flagged the resident whose wound trajectory changed overnight. She has caught the MDS outlier before it locks. She knows which high-acuity resident has had four different nurses in two weeks. None of that required a chart scrub. All of it was surfaced automatically.
We build your DON’s daily intelligence picture — automatically, from your data.
Every report on this list — readmission risk, infection surveillance, acuity-matched staffing, overnight incidents, assessment accuracy, wound trajectories, and staff continuity — is built into our daily reporting suite. We pull it from your existing EMR data. No new systems. No floor disruption. No integration project.
Your DON walks in every morning with a prioritized, pre-built risk picture instead of a blank screen and four hours of chart scrubbing ahead of her. Your morning huddle becomes a 12-minute intervention briefing instead of an information-gathering session. Your highest-risk residents get attention before the crisis finds them.
Daily Hospital Readmission Risk Report — ranked by composite clinical signal, not just diagnosis
Infection surveillance and HAI hospitalization risk — tied directly to FY 2026 VBP scoring
Acuity-matched staffing alignment — so your most experienced nurses are where the risk is highest
Incident and F609 reporting clock alerts — so no notification window closes without leadership knowing
MDS accuracy outliers — documentation-reality gaps caught before the assessment locks
Wound trajectory and pressure injury risk — prevention before breakdown, not documentation after it
Staff continuity and turnover risk around high-acuity residents — the VBP measure most buildings are ignoring
We start with a free Hospital Readmission Risk Report — built from your own data, delivered within days, no commitment required. If you or your DON sees the value, we automate the full suite. If the first report doesn’t surface something worth acting on, you walked away with free clinical intelligence about your building.
The building your DON walks into tomorrow morning is the same one she walked into today — unless she starts tomorrow with a different picture. That picture is what we build.
