Rosie's Adult Family Care Home sits on Garrett Avenue in Port Charlotte, Florida, and offers care for adults who need help with daily living, whether due to illness or an accident, and the place feels like a regular home, not like a big crowded building, which is good for folks who like small groups and a comfortable setting. The staff helps with medication management and makes sure people get their medicine on time, and there are services for both short stays and long-term care, so if someone just needs help for a while after a hospital visit, they can stay here, and others make this their permanent home. Residents get help with dressing, bathing, and other daily routines, and there's laundry and housekeeping, so chores don't pile up. There's a meal program with one or two cooked meals a day, and they prepare special options without sugar and low or no salt for people who need those diets, plus everybody can use the kitchen area if they want a snack or something extra between meals.
The care at Rosie's covers a wide range, including assisted living, memory care for those with forgetfulness or dementia, companion care for people who like some company, and nursing care for those who need medical help. The home has some special features, like walk-in tubs that make bathing easier and safer, Medical Alert Systems for emergencies, a Senior Safety Guide, and medication dispensers. Rooms come with air conditioning, cable or satellite TV, Wi-Fi or high-speed internet, and kitchenettes, and the bathrooms have wheelchair-accessible showers, so folks with trouble moving around can still get clean comfortably, and there's incontinence care if somebody needs it. Transportation is available for a fee, and they have a TV lounge and places to sit together inside, plus stretching classes and Bible study for those who want activities that aren't too strenuous. Home security keeps everyone safe, and the staff helps manage healthcare with memory care, medication checks, and care for non-ambulatory residents. RosyLin A. Parkes is the President, and Wayne F. Parkes is the Vice President, and the home has been around since 2013, run as a licensed Florida corporation. Residents get treated as people, with services and routines that fit what they need, and the setting feels more personal and less rushed than a bigger nursing facility. Annual reports keep things on record, and the home keeps its license active, so families know their loved ones live somewhere that follows the rules.