Liberty Care and Rehabilitation Center offers assisted living and Alzheimer's care, with skilled nursing, speech therapy, and occupational therapy available, and they do both long-term and short-term care, so people can get help for a while or stay if they need it, and the care plans get made by a group of health professionals within seven days after assessment, so residents' needs are looked at pretty soon after moving in. This place has 97 certified beds and usually has about 81 residents each day, and the nurse staffing level comes out to about 3.60 hours per resident a day, but the nurse turnover rate's pretty high at 63.4%, which means many nurses leave during the year. Liberty Care and Rehabilitation Center works with groups like the Alzheimer's Association, American Lung Association, and American Heart Association, and it's part of Kindred Healthcare, though Signature Healthcare LLC has run things since August 2013, and it's now in Signature HealthCARE's Hometown network that tries to bring care and rehab together in a bigger picture.
The building has parking for customers and onsite services to help with daily needs, plus different amenities aimed at matching what seniors like or need, and they have quality of life and spirituality programs for all backgrounds. They've even joined the Eden Registry for person-directed care and talk about dignity a lot in their mission, working towards treating everyone as an individual and focusing on personalized spirituality and care. You'll find clinical therapy programs that are tailored for each resident, and they try to make activities and care fit different cultures and religions. It's been cited for one infection-related deficiency and a total of 16 deficiencies on inspection reports, so that's something to keep in mind, but they do have safety measures in place for accident hazards and supervision, wanting to avoid accidents as much as possible. The center focuses mainly on nursing home services and rehabilitation, so most folks come here for steady care when they can't live at home safely anymore, and the environment tries to keep things resident-centered so that dignity and comfort are part of daily life.