Park Center Healthcare and Rehabilitation sits in a neighborhood where folks can get to Mahoning Pain Management, the pharmacy at Marc's, and even Starbucks if someone feels like a coffee, and the place itself holds 99 certified beds with about 92 people living there most days. The staff offers 24-hour skilled nursing supervision, and there's a full team ready to help with things like bathing, dressing, medication, transfers, and other daily activities, while a nurse turnover rate of 44.6% sits a little better than the state's average; though nurse staffing levels are a bit lower than the state average, at 3.10 hours per resident daily. You'll find long-term care, a transitional care unit, and a secured memory care neighborhood set up for folks with memory problems. For those coming in after surgery or injury, the short-term rehab and sub-acute rehabilitation programs help people build strength and get back on their feet, using physical, occupational, and speech therapy-plus programs designed to keep folks from heading back to the hospital. The staff puts together personalized medical assessments and gets family input to shape care for every resident, and there's palliative care for serious illnesses, respite care to give family members a break, and hospice for end-of-life comfort and dignity.
People at Park Center have access to comfortable living spaces with furnished rooms, private bathrooms, kitchenettes, cable TV, air conditioning, Wi-Fi, and phones, and those who need non-ambulatory care get help when moving around. There's a fitness room, activity and arts rooms, a theater, outdoor common areas, game rooms, walking paths, spa and wellness facilities, and a library, with meals made in-house (even meals for special diets), plus housekeeping, laundry, and move-in help for new residents. Someone could join in community or resident-run activities, movie nights, music programs, daily events, and can take the bus service out when it's needed.
Staff aim to keep everyone comfortable, safe, and treated with dignity, but government inspections have turned up 77 deficiencies over time-including some about infection control, food safety, and resident rights, like not always letting residents join in planning their care or keeping them informed about issues. A few of these problems were found in a January 2025 complaint report, and the facility's had a Special Focus Facility Candidate designation because of past quality concerns. Owners and managers include Fuego LLC, David Oberlander, Park Center Holdings LLC, and Park Center Opco LLC, and they've kept the operation running for some time, so folks living here and their families should expect a range of services aimed at health and well-being, but also might want to ask questions about the care experience and what's been done about those reported problems.