Meadows Assisted Living and Care Campus

    71 North Avenue, Mt. Clemens, MI, 48043
    4.2 · 37 reviews
    • Assisted living
    • Memory care
    AnonymousLoved one of resident
    4.0

    Clean homey facility, staffing tradeoffs

    I placed a family member here and like the spotless, attractive facility, cozy common areas, nice courtyard and generally friendly, caring staff. Rooms are mostly nice and modern but memory-care rooms are very small and hallways/doorways feel narrow. Meals are homemade and often good but sometimes over-seasoned or inconsistent. Biggest issue is chronic understaffing and turnover that can delay care and limit activities, though management is responsive and working on improvements. Overall clean, homey, and close to family - good value if you accept the staffing and space tradeoffs.

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    Amenities

    4.24 · 37 reviews

    Overall rating

    1. 5
    2. 4
    3. 3
    4. 2
    5. 1
    • Care

      3.9
    • Staff

      3.9
    • Meals

      3.5
    • Amenities

      3.9
    • Value

      3.3

    Pros

    • Caring, compassionate and attentive staff
    • Communicative and accommodating staff with prompt responses
    • Clean / extremely well-maintained facility
    • Homemade meals prepared daily (three meals a day)
    • Small, home-like group setting and family-owned operation
    • Dementia-trained staff and tailored care plans
    • Good value / reasonably priced for many families
    • Smooth and easy move-in process
    • Secure entry / locked doors and a safe-feeling atmosphere
    • On-site staff employed directly (not contractors)
    • Personalized health updates, photos, and good family communication
    • Pleasant common areas: open dining, TV/social rooms, courtyard and outdoor spaces
    • Festive holiday touches and thoughtful resident-focused events
    • Flexible pharmacy partner allowing use of regular plans
    • Hospice-capable and experienced with memory care

    Cons

    • Chronic understaffing and staffing shortages (including weekends/holidays)
    • Inconsistent staffing and high turnover leading to lack of continuity
    • Care sometimes delayed or missed (showers, changes, medication timing)
    • Concerns about medication administration and lack of certified med passer
    • Some rooms (especially memory care) are small with limited storage
    • Building layout issues: narrow hallways/doorways and poorly designed rooms
    • Food quality and variety inconsistent: frequent soups, mushy vegetables, dry or over-seasoned meat, limited portions
    • Limited activities and outings; desire for a clearer activity/menu calendar
    • Occasional housekeeping issues (rooms not cleaned well, bedwetting incidents, lost clothing)
    • Perceived prioritization of profit by ownership by some reviewers
    • Unclear or non-upfront pricing and billing policies (payment for next full month)
    • Staff sometimes focused on cleaning/cooking rather than direct care due to staffing levels
    • Visitor restrictions reported at times
    • Isolated incidents of unprofessional behavior by aides
    • Mixed reports on value — some find it expensive

    Summary review

    Overall sentiment across the reviews is mixed but leans positive on the facility’s culture, cleanliness, and individualized, dementia-capable care — while repeatedly flagging operational problems largely related to staffing and some aspects of daily care. Many families consistently praise the staff as caring, communicative and accommodating; they note prompt responses to calls, personalized health updates and photos, and staff members who go out of their way to ensure resident comfort. Reviewers repeatedly emphasize the homelike, small-group atmosphere, the family-owned nature of the campus, and a sense of safety from secure entry systems and locked doors. The facility’s physical appearance and upkeep score highly across most reviews: multiple commenters call it the cleanest facility they’ve seen, with pleasant common areas, courtyard and outdoor spaces, salon and thoughtful holiday decorations.

    Care quality shows two competing patterns in the reviews. A substantial number of families describe very good care: dementia-trained staff, tailored care plans after evaluations, hospice capabilities, smooth move-ins, helpful management and strong communication. For those families the combination of personalized attention, homemade meals, and the small-community feel provides peace of mind and a recommendation. However, an equally significant cluster of reviews documents compromised care outcomes tied to chronic understaffing. Reported problems include missed or delayed showers and changes, medication administration timing that causes anxiety, lack of certified med passers in some shifts, and caregivers who appear overloaded. These gaps have tangible consequences in some accounts — resident hygiene not maintained, bed-wetting incidents, lost clothing, or care tasks prioritized behind cleaning and cooking because staff numbers are limited.

    Staffing and personnel stability are the single most consistent concern. Multiple reviewers mention severe understaffing, especially on weekends and holidays, and frequent staff turnover that undermines continuity of care and resident relationships. Some families report managers often in offices while frontline caregivers are stretched thin; others laud specific staff members by name for being helpful and attentive. Staffing shortages also feed into variability in performance — while some aides and nurses are described as wonderful and professional, others are noted as inconsistent or on rare occasions unprofessional. The staff being employed directly (not contractors) and the family-owned nature of the facility are seen as positives by many, but those organizational attributes have not prevented hiring and retention challenges.

    Facilities and layout receive mixed remarks. The campus is widely described as attractive, well-maintained, and very clean, with bright dining and social areas that encourage visiting and socializing. At the same time several reviewers point out design shortcomings: memory care rooms can be quite small with a bathroom taking up a large portion of the space, doorways and hallways are narrow, and some rooms do not have enough space for residents’ belongings. These physical constraints may limit comfort for residents with more possessions or mobility equipment.

    Dining and activities are both strengths and areas for improvement depending on the reviewer. Many families appreciate the homemade meals prepared daily, the three meals offered, and the general quality of food in numerous accounts. Others report repetitive menus (frequent soups), texture issues (mushy vegetables, dry meat), inconsistent seasoning (over-spiced), and insufficient portions at times. Several reviewers requested a monthly activity and menu calendar and asked for more outings and varied programming; while activities such as bingo, afternoon games and holiday events are available and appreciated, there is a clear desire among families for more consistent, scheduled engagement and better visibility into activities and menus.

    Management, communication and policies present a complex picture. On communications, the facility scores well for regular updates, responsiveness (often under five minutes), informative health communications and shared photos. On the administrative side there are complaints about unclear pricing and a billing policy that requires payment for the next full month, which some families found frustrating. There are also reports of a transitioning management team and improvements underway (new activities director, implemented door codes, hiring efforts), indicating active attempts to address concerns. A few reviews allege profit-driven decisions that affect staffing or priorities, but these are not universal and are balanced by multiple accounts of a compassionate owner and emotionally supportive staff.

    Notable patterns and takeaways: positives center on compassion, cleanliness, small-community feel, and dementia-capable care; negatives concentrate on staffing shortages, inconsistent service delivery, and some operational/policy issues. If evaluating the Meadows Assisted Living and Care Campus, families can expect a well-kept, homey environment with staff who often provide attentive, personalized care and homemade meals. However, they should probe specifics about current staffing levels, medication administration protocols, caregiver-to-resident ratios (core hours), turnover rates, and how the facility covers weekends and holidays. Also clarify pricing and billing terms up front, ask for sample activity and menu calendars, and, if memory care is needed, inspect room sizes and bathroom layouts to ensure they meet the resident’s needs. The reviews suggest a facility with many real strengths but also important operational risks that should be explored and monitored during the decision process.

    Location

    Map showing location of Meadows Assisted Living and Care Campus

    About Meadows Assisted Living and Care Campus

    Meadows Assisted Living and Care Campus sits in the heart of Mt. Clemens, Michigan, and offers a clean and well-kept place for seniors who need different levels of help, whether it's daily living support, memory care, or even skilled nursing care with a nurse on staff part-time and visits from physicians and podiatrists. The family-owned and operated community has a friendly, home-like atmosphere where staff treat residents with warmth and respect, keeping things safe with round-the-clock support and a secure environment designed for those with Alzheimer's and dementia. The place feels modern and well put together with 30 private suites and 4 semi-private suites, all fully furnished with a twin bed, nightstand, lamp, flat-screen TV, cable, built-in closet, and a bathroom with a roll-in shower, so folks with mobility needs can get around easier, and every suite has a nurse call system just in case someone needs help. Residents can expect help with bathing, dressing, medication reminders, and daily personal care, and staff handle housekeeping, linen, and laundry so people don't have to worry about chores.

    The staff help new residents with move-in coordination, so transitions go smoothly, and the building is accessible, covering most needs with barrier-free layouts. Meals come from chefs and meal planners who prepare nutritious menus, and there's extra attention to personalized diets and special dining programs, with guests able to join for a meal. Residents eat together in a community dining hall and can take part in activities that go on every day, run by both the community and the residents themselves, with an activity director making sure there's plenty to do like trivia, art classes, resident music group gatherings, outings, field trips, game nights, story time, music events, and horticultural programs, plus on-site religious services and devotional gatherings. The gardens and outdoor courtyard give everyone a place to relax, and there's a beauty salon and barber, Wi-Fi, cable TVs in rooms and common areas, and places for arts and crafts or just sitting together with friends.

    Medication management, in-house pharmacy, in-home health care, therapy services like occupational and physical therapy, and coordination with outside healthcare providers all work together for a full care system, especially for folks who need rehabilitation or help with wounds or special conditions. Meadows runs memory care programs with activities tailored to people with Alzheimer's and other types of dementia, keeping things safe with enclosed spaces and constant supervision. Independent living options also let seniors have their own space and use extra help only when needed, with transportation for appointments or outings and an all-inclusive rate structure that covers core services for comfort. Meadows doesn't allow pets in the building, but it does allow some with special permission, and there's plenty of parking for guests and residents.

    The staff build community with good communication, even arranging FaceTime visits, and the place has won awards for its meals and dining experience. Recreation rooms, a serene courtyard, gardens, and a family approach make Meadows feel comfortable rather than fancy, and there's a focus on keeping folks as independent and healthy as possible, whether that means joining a gardening group, trying fitness and mental wellness programs, or just relaxing in private suites. With state licenses AL500388667 and AL500388683, and over 25,000 square feet of space, Meadows Assisted Living and Care Campus stands out as a straightforward, dependable option for seniors needing different care levels in Mt. Clemens. Nearby, the sister location Oaktree Place Senior Living operates as a group home with about 6 bedrooms and the same family touch.

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