Overall sentiment from the collected reviews is mixed but leans strongly negative, driven by multiple reports of clinical neglect, hygiene failures, and inconsistent staffing. While a minority of reviewers describe positive experiences — particularly around rehab outcomes, certain compassionate staff members, and pleasant outdoor amenities — a larger number of summaries raise serious concerns about basic standards of care and safety that recur across different reviewers.
Care quality and clinical concerns: Many reviewers reported worrying clinical issues such as poor-quality medical care, documented risks of C. difficile infection, and missed or delayed provider responsiveness. Several accounts describe preventable clinical outcomes: bed sores from inadequate repositioning, prolonged exposure to soiled diapers, risk of UTIs, choking risk from poor mouth care, and other signs of neglect. Lack of adequate physical therapy was mentioned by some as hindering recovery. There are also multiple references to problematic transitions and administrative delays ("red tape" around discharge) and a troubling report of poor communication during a hospice stay and at end-of-life.
Staff performance and staffing patterns: Staffing is a dominant theme. Many reviewers characterize CNAs and nurses as unhelpful, slow to respond to call lights, or lazy, with examples of infrequent assistance and long delays. High turnover and staffing shortages are cited and appear to contribute to inconsistent care. Conversely, a subset of reviewers praise specific staff as "amazing" or devoted — indicating significant variability between individual caregivers and shifts. There are also reports of unprofessional behavior, including staff yelling at family members, which raises concerns about workplace culture and family interactions.
Hygiene, cleanliness, and safety: Reports on cleanliness are contradictory. Some reviewers note clean rooms and a nice dining room, while others describe dirty dining areas, dusty rooms with cobwebs, foul odors, and general run-down conditions. Serious hygiene failures are reported repeatedly: infrequent bathing, unclean nails and hair, mouths full of sputum, and diapers left on for hours. Safety issues include absence of bed alarms for identified fall risks, ignored beeping alarms, and residents left sitting in wheelchairs for extended times. These patterns suggest lapses in routine personal care and basic safety monitoring for vulnerable residents.
Facilities, amenities, and activities: The physical campus elicits mixed feedback. Positive notes include a pleasant exterior property with trails and an outdoor entertaining area, and some reviewers found the dining room attractive and the rooms comfortable. Many activities are available and spiritual care is present (chaplain and Christian/Catholic formation). However, the building is also described as run-down by some, and maintenance/cleanliness problems were recurring in negative reviews. Parking and logistical inconveniences were mentioned as an additional frustration.
Management, communication, and value: Several reviewers raised concerns about management and administrative processes: difficulty with discharge logistics, perceived poor value for money ("expensive yet low quality care"), and inconsistent communication from clinical leadership. While one reviewer noted helpful hospital social services and a doctor who proactively called to inform, others experienced little to no communication during critical moments (including hospice). Placement decisions are questioned in at least one review (residents with mental health issues placed near the nurses' unit), implying potential care-planning and risk-assessment issues.
Notable patterns and recommendation summary: The reviews present a bifurcated picture — pockets of genuinely caring staff and effective rehab care exist alongside repeated, serious allegations of neglect, hygiene lapses, and safety failures. The frequency and severity of the negative reports (bed sores, soiled diapers, ignored alarms, infection concerns) are especially concerning for prospective families and suggest systemic issues rather than isolated incidents. If considering this facility, it would be prudent to directly verify current staffing levels, infection-control records, quality measures, and communication protocols; visit multiple shifts to observe consistency of care; ask about fall-prevention devices and alarm policies; and confirm discharge and hospice procedures. The mixed nature of the reviews means some residents do have positive experiences, but the volume of serious negative accounts warrants careful, detailed inquiry before placement.