The Heights Rehabilitation and Healthcare Center sits in Broadview Heights, Ohio, serving Cuyahoga County and the greater Cleveland area with skilled nursing, rehabilitation, memory care, and respite care. Staff offer both short-term and long-term care and treat each resident with compassion, using a resident-centered approach where they focus on comfort, recovery, and improving daily life for folks who need it. The facility has 149 certified beds and offers both private and semi-private rooms, and you'll find amenities like a computer room, communal dining, WiFi, cable TV, a garden, and even a place to do arts, crafts, or listen to music. Nurses are always on duty around the clock, and a team of medical staff use advanced equipment, providing care for orthopedic, cardiac, pulmonary, stroke, and ventilator needs-there's a dialysis unit and a brand new Evergreen Ventilator Care Unit as well.
The Heights has programs like Tai Chi, yoga, and gardening, plus religious services and social activities to help everyone stay active. You can even invite overnight guests, and both residents and their visitors can get meals and room service when needed. Salon services, fitness equipment, housekeeping, laundry, and personal care assistants round out the services, while transportation and shopping trips help residents stay connected. The facility accepts Medicaid, Medicare, insurance, and private payment, and VA aid is available for veterans.
The Heights is a for-profit nursing and rehabilitation center, owned by Crown Ohio Holdco II LLC and managed by Yisrael Friedman, Mark Neuman, and Meir Singer since 2019, with Crown Healthcare Group involved. The nurse turnover rate sits a little below the state average, and nurse hours per resident per day are lower than average. The Heights gets described as a peaceful and home-like place with a good reputation in the community, though there have been 31 deficiencies noted in recent government inspections, including issues around privacy, infection control, and making sure treatment matches residents' needs and wishes, though no actual harm was reported in those cases. The center's website provides more detailed service information, and people can tour the facility virtually.