Maine Veterans' Home in Scarborough sits in a quiet area with easy access to hospitals in the Portland area, and since opening in 1990, has focused on caring for veterans, their spouses, widows, widowers, and gold star parents. Staff and volunteers work together every day to give care, offer social activities, help with errands, and provide support for folks who served in the US Armed Forces, including National Guard and Reserve, as long as discharge was honorable. The place belongs to a group of six homes across Maine, so you'll find a lot of experience here, and Scarborough keeps 150 beds for both short-term and long-term skilled nursing, memory care, rehabilitation, respite care, and residential care, along with a pharmacy on-site and a dedicated medical director.
Residents can take part in activities, outings to local spots, or enjoy help from the volunteer program with transportation to community events, help with mail, or visits from local veteran groups. Common areas, quiet rooms for rest, and a barber or beauty shop give people space to relax or socialize. Meals are cooked fresh with balanced nutrition in mind, and the dining style lets folks order what they want from 4 a.m. to 8 p.m., with room service if needed, and there's even a kitchen for families to use when they visit. Rehabilitation services include speech, occupational, and physical therapy right on site, plus a respiratory therapy and "Rehab-to-Home" recovery program. Therapy and nursing students from area hospitals sometimes help out, since the Home links up with Maine Medical Center for training.
It's important to mention that each person gets an individualized care plan, with nurses, therapists, dietary help, and activity staff working together, since needs change over time. The community holds devotional and offsite activities, and everything's planned with input from residents, so menus and events match what people want. Beds break out into more than 40 in skilled rehab, over 40 in long-term care, 30 in domiciliary care, and there's a special unit for Alzheimer's and dementia. There's always a registered nurse on site, with medical services round the clock.
Maine Veterans' Home Scarborough operates separately from the VA but works closely with the Department of Veterans Affairs to keep care current, and the staff, led by Administrator Patricia K. Nutting, help with benefits applications. They assist with things like Aid and Attendance, daily VA stipends, and help veterans or their families understand eligibility for VA programs, Medicare, MaineCare, long-term care insurance, or private funds. VA coverage applies for veterans with a 70% or greater service-connected disability, and care is adjusted to veteran status and need. Admissions staff help manage applications and waitlists, figure out paperwork like the DD-214, and explain coverage requirements. There's a priority system for veterans and for those with serious medical issues if beds fill up.
Folks living here can use computers and tablets for emails or video chats, and a large Veteran Hall with projection TV hosts community gatherings. The activities program includes trips to casinos, restaurants, movies, fishing, or shopping, and transportation comes wheelchair-accessible. Volunteer groups play a big part, helping with events and daily activities, and there are phone numbers just for folks interested in volunteering at Scarborough. Maine Veterans' Home Scarborough is a nonprofit set up especially for veterans and their families, open since 1990, and offers a full range of care and practical support for those who have served, without much fuss or fanfare, just dependable help and respect.