Harbor Village North Health And Rehabilitation Center gives seniors several choices for care, including assisted living, memory care, skilled nursing, respite stays, independent living, and rehabilitation, and the staff help people with daily tasks like bathing, dressing, medication, and even wound care, while the community provides 24-hour call coverage and supervision, with nurses on site for 12 to 16 hours every day and all-night watch, and while residents get furnished rooms with private baths, cable, Wi-Fi, kitchenettes, air conditioning, and cleaning services, there's also meal service with a chef, restaurant-style dining, and special diets for diabetes or allergies. You'll find activities planned every day, both trips and things right in the building like art, music, games, fitness, and movies, plus amenities like a beauty salon, business room, wellness center, and outdoor spaces with walking paths or gardens, and families can use support services during move-in or care planning. People with Alzheimer's and dementia have specialized programs, secure areas, memory activities, and trained staff for 24-hour help, and others can use the Suboxone maintenance program, orthopedic services, wound care from their Wound Center for Excellence, and help after sickness or surgery.
Harbor Village North takes Medicare and Medicaid and accepts direct admissions from home or other providers, and the ownership comes from Wachusett Ventures LLC, while Troy Guntulis leads management, with other indirect owners including Wakefield Capital LLC, Raymond Dennehy, Joel Kirchick, and Steven Vera. The center holds 128 certified beds and averages about 114 residents per day, though staffing numbers run a bit below the state average at 3.13 nurse hours per resident, and nurse turnover is a little high at 45.2%, so staff may change. Deficiencies noted in inspection reports-36 in all-include some related to infection control and resident rights, including not always providing necessary social services or following up on complaints, along with two infection-related citations, so the quality history is mixed and worth reviewing. The community tries to create a safe, welcoming place focused on respect, dignity, and compassionate care, offering a wide range of services and support for seniors and their families, but like many places, it's faced challenges in meeting some federal standards.