Consulate Health Care of Williamsburg sits on Jamestown Road, close to the historic area of Colonial Williamsburg and nearby Jamestown and Yorktown, so you've got a quiet, pleasant neighborhood surrounding the building, and the facility itself is a 90-bed skilled nursing center with both private and semi-private room options, though right now they're not accepting new patients, and most communication happens in English, though some staff may speak other languages if needed because the staff come from different backgrounds. The place provides nursing and rehabilitation services, long-term care, respite, and hospice services, and there's a focus on recovery and living, so you've got people staying for either short-term rehab or longer stays depending on what their health calls for, and they do things like offer physical, occupational, and speech therapy. There's an Alzheimer's Special Care Unit set up with safety in mind but meant to let people move around freely as much as possible, and the nurses are there 24 hours a day. Residents there tend to have unfurnished living spaces, and there are property features like housekeeping and emergency call systems to help them out with daily needs, and an educational library of resources with articles, events, helpful links, and guides about stuff like caregiving or financial planning, and the staff will try to treat people like family, in line with what the company calls a culture of Ambassadors of Care.
The facility's owned by Lv Chc Holdings I Llc with management by Consulate Management Company Iii, Llc since late 2021, and currently, there's a group of indirect owners and Timothy Lehner got involved in May 2024, but what's important for families to know is that this is a for-profit place that is part of Consulate Healthcare and shares connections with Independence Living Centers, Nspire Healthcare, and Raydiant Healthcare. There's Medicaid, Medicare, and private insurance as payment options, and as a licensed skilled nursing facility, state records show 70 skilled nursing beds and another 20 nursing facility beds, usually with around 85 residents staying on an average day. Nurse staffing is a bit lower than the Virginia state average at 3.42 nurse hours per resident each day, and nurse turnover runs at about 53.6%, which is higher than the state's typical level, so people may see some new faces from time to time.
Inspections over the last few years have brought up some issues, too, including 32 total deficiencies, some tied directly to infection control, and a handful about day-to-day care and pain management-with the April 2024 inspection listing two deficiencies and other inspection reports showing up to four at a time, with details about not always meeting the federal standards meant to keep infections from spreading in a place like this, and records specifically show that there were misses in providing safe and appropriate pain management for folks who need it (that's a Quality of Life and Care-F0697 issue) and also some trouble making sure those who aren't able to handle all parts of daily living get the care and help they need every day (that's Quality of Life and Care-F0677). Charges, costs, and efficiency are tracked here, compared using quartile rankings so there's a sense of how things stack up against other skilled nursing homes, and for folks looking for extra help, there's a directory with thousands of resources from local and national agencies, including those focused on veterans, aging, and disabilities.
Living at Consulate Health Care of Williamsburg means getting services from a larger health care chain with an emphasis on skilled nursing and rehab, with most rooms unfurnished so people can bring their own things, and residents have access to resources on everything from health and housing to transportation, legal issues, social activities, and employment, thanks to partnerships with groups like VirginiaNavigator, SeniorNavigator, and other organizations. As a member of the Consulate Health Care family, the facility's got connections and support networks designed for a wide range of resident needs, but inspection reports, staffing numbers, and history of deficiencies are something families should consider when making plans.