License + contact information
| Facility name | Advanced Health Care of Henderson |
|---|---|
| Address | 1285 E Cactus Ave, Henderson, NV 89183 |
| Phone | 661-866-4734 |
| License type | Skilled Nursing Facility (SNF) |
| Credential number | 8620-SNF-7 |
| Status | Active |
| Licensed capacity | 38 resident beds |
| First licensed | 11/07/2018 |
| Current renewal through | 12/31/2026 |
| Disciplinary action on file | None reported |
| Administrator on file | Michael Tuck (Administrator) |
About Advanced Health Care of Henderson
Advanced Health Care of Henderson is a Nevada-licensed skilled nursing community in Henderson, holding credential 8620-SNF-7 from the Nevada Bureau of Health Care Quality and Compliance (BHCQC). The facility has been continuously licensed since 2018, currently operates with 38 licensed beds, and is one of Henderson's established skilled nursing operations.
As a Skilled Nursing Facility, Advanced Health Care of Henderson carries both Nevada BHCQC licensure and federal CMS Medicare/Medicaid certification. That dual-layer regulatory framework produces the most public quality data of any senior-care category. The sections below cover how to use CMS Care Compare effectively, what the staffing-hours and quality measures actually mean, and the SNF-specific evaluation framework we use with families.
How Nevada regulates this category — and the federal layer that matters more
Skilled Nursing Facilities (SNFs) in Nevada carry a dual regulatory framework. The state licensure piece comes from Nevada BHCQC under NAC 449.0151 through 449.0998. The federal certification piece — which is the more consequential layer for most families — comes from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), and that's what produces the data on Medicare.gov Care Compare.
Every SNF participating in Medicare and Medicaid is surveyed annually by state surveyors acting as CMS contractors. These recertification surveys are exhaustive — they cover roughly 200 federal regulatory tags spanning resident care, dignity and rights, infection control, medication management, dietary services, environmental safety, and administrative oversight. Survey results, citation severity, and the facility's response are public information on Care Compare.
The CMS five-star rating system rolls up three components: health inspection results (35%), staffing levels (35%), and quality measures (30%, drawn from MDS clinical data). The staffing component is increasingly important because CMS publishes nursing-hours-per-resident-day breakdowns by role (RN, LPN, CNA). Facilities with low total nurse hours per resident or low RN coverage tend to have poorer outcomes regardless of how nice the lobby looks.
Beyond the recertification cycle, SNFs are also subject to complaint-driven investigations, which can result in additional surveys outside the annual schedule. Repeat or severe deficiencies result in civil money penalties, denial of payment for new admissions, or in the most serious cases termination from Medicare/Medicaid participation. Before signing any admission paperwork, families should look up the facility on Care Compare and read the most recent survey citations end-to-end — the document tells you what the regulator actually found inside the building.
Henderson context for skilled nursing facilities
Henderson is Nevada's second-largest city by population and one of the country's fastest-growing retirement destinations. The senior facility footprint in Henderson is dominated by larger assisted-living and memory-care communities, master-planned community integration (Sun City Anthem, Cadence, Inspirada), and a strong skilled-nursing presence near Henderson Hospital.
Hospital proximity. Primary hospitals serving Henderson senior facilities include Henderson Hospital (HCA), St. Rose Dominican (Siena and Rose de Lima campuses), and Sunrise Hospital across the Las Vegas border. Henderson's hospital footprint is unusually strong relative to its population, which affects the SNF and post-acute rehab supply in the city.
Senior demographic. Henderson has roughly 60,000 adults age 65 and older. Median household income for the 65+ population is higher than Las Vegas — roughly $65,000 — which is reflected in the higher concentration of premium assisted-living and CCRC-style developments in the city. Sun City Anthem alone holds about 14,000 age-restricted residents.
Advanced Health Care of Henderson's address — 1285 E Cactus Ave — places it within the Henderson senior-care market. When you evaluate this facility, consider whether the location works for the family members who will visit, the proximity to the resident's preferred hospital system, and the routes that emergency services would take.
What this category typically costs in 2026
In Las Vegas in 2026, skilled nursing pricing for facilities similar to Advanced Health Care of Henderson typically falls in the $8,500 to $13,500 range — Nevada SNF private-pay rates for long-term care fall in this monthly range, with Las Vegas trending toward the higher end of the state. Medicare-covered short-term rehab is a different financial picture — covered in full for the first 20 days and with a daily copay (about $204/day in 2026) for days 21 to 100, after a qualifying 3-day inpatient hospital stay.
For Advanced Health Care of Henderson specifically, we maintain current pricing as part of our advisor service. Call (702) 802-0093 for the current rate and what's included. Pricing on senior-care websites is often out of date or marketing-positioned; the only reliable way to compare is to ask the operator directly, in writing, for an itemized rate sheet — and that's a conversation we make easier.
What 8 years of continuous licensure tells you
Advanced Health Care of Henderson has held its current Nevada BHCQC credential for 8 years — squarely in the established-operator range. The facility has gone through 8 relicensure surveys and any complaint investigations during that period. Operators in this tenure window have typically settled into stable operating patterns; what you see on tour is usually what you get day-to-day.
What we'd ask at this tenure: has there been ownership turnover or administrator change in the past two years? Has staffing pattern shifted? Most of the meaningful variance in established facilities comes from leadership transitions, not from the buildings themselves.
An evaluation framework grounded in CMS data
Skilled nursing is the senior-care category with the most public regulatory data and the most useful comparative metrics. The framework:
1. CMS five-star overall — but look at the components. The overall star aggregates health inspection (35%), staffing (35%), and quality measures (30%). A facility can be five-star overall but two-star on health inspection if staffing and quality are compensating. The component breakdown matters more than the headline.
2. Recent health inspection narrative. On Care Compare, click through to the most recent state survey results and read the citation narratives. Severity codes (D, E, F, G, H, I, J, K, L) tell you whether the deficiency was minor, broad-scope, or actually harmed residents. Repeat deficiencies are worse than one-off deficiencies.
3. Total nurse staffing hours per resident day. CMS publishes this with RN, LPN, and CNA breakdowns. National average runs around 4.0 hours total per resident day. Anything below 3.5 hours is concerning; above 4.5 hours is generally good. RN hours specifically should be at least 0.6 hours per resident day.
4. Quality measures — the ones that matter most. Pay attention to falls with major injury, pressure ulcers, antipsychotic medication use, and rehospitalization rate. These are the measures most sensitive to actual care quality.
5. Civil money penalties and special focus status. Facilities with significant penalties or on the CMS Special Focus Facility list are publicly flagged. Avoid these unless there are specific reasons to overlook the regulatory history.
How we help families choose between Henderson skilled nursing options
Vegas Senior Advisor maintains a current view of every BHCQC-licensed senior-care operator in Clark County. We track license status, ownership changes, administrator tenure, recent state survey results, capacity availability, current pricing, and the soft factors that don't show up in regulatory data — staff retention reputation, family-feedback patterns, and how the operator handles care-level escalation.
When a family calls us about Advanced Health Care of Henderson, here's the typical flow: a 15-minute conversation to understand the resident's care level, the family's budget, the geographic preference, and the timeline. From that, we propose two or three operators that fit — sometimes including Advanced Health Care of Henderson, sometimes not, depending on whether the fit is actually right for the situation. We work for families, not facilities, which means our recommendations are based on fit, not on which operator pays the highest referral fee.
The service is free for families. We're compensated by referral partners only when a placement matches. That economic model creates the obvious question — does the referral fee influence our recommendations? Our policy: every operator on this directory could be a referral partner, and we recommend based on actual fit. If a family asks us straight up whether a specific operator pays a higher rate than another, we tell them. We'd rather lose a referral than recommend a misfit.
To start a conversation about Advanced Health Care of Henderson or any other Henderson skilled nursing option, call (702) 802-0093. Most first conversations run 15 to 20 minutes. We'll come away with a shortlist of two or three operators worth tour visits, an honest read on each, and the questions to ask when you tour.
Data sources + last updated
License data on this page is sourced from the Nevada Department of Public and Behavioral Health, Bureau of Health Care Quality and Compliance (BHCQC) public license registry. Cost ranges, evaluation framework, and operational context are drawn from our internal advisor-tracking database, the Genworth Cost of Care Survey 2026, AARP, the Alzheimer's Association, the National Investment Center for Seniors Housing & Care, and CMS Care Compare for federally certified providers. We refresh this page quarterly. Last updated: June 15, 2026.