Charlwell House Health & Rehabilitation Center sits at 305 Walpole Street in Norwood, Massachusetts, serving as a health and rehabilitation center with both short-term and long-term care. The place runs with a public, for-profit model and falls under the management of groups such as Bonadio & Co LLP and Clipboard Health, having between 11 and 50 staff members. The center keeps 124 certified beds, with an average daily census of about 69 residents, though some records mention 109 beds in the facility, so that bit varies depending on where you look. Residents here get nursing care, rehabilitation like physical, occupational, and speech therapies, and assisted living for seniors who need help with daily tasks such as bathing, dressing, and medication reminders. Memory care's set aside for people with Alzheimer's or dementia, and independent living's available for healthy seniors wanting a social space without the chores of home. Charlwell House also provides home care with trained aides visiting seniors at home.
Meals are planned by chefs to fit each resident's nutritional needs, and menus aim to offer three balanced meals daily. The facility runs special dining events and has improved food services from years past. There's an Activities Assistant organizing recreational programs, musical entertainment, dog-therapy visits, and regular newspaper delivery. Residents can relax in big dayrooms, use in-house laundry, or get services from the on-site beauty salon. Amenities include air conditioning, complimentary Wi-Fi, and flat-screen TVs with cable. Medical care comes from an in-house medical team and a Medical Director, with physician services from primary doctors, specialists, and nurse practitioners. There's a Director of Admissions/AIT, social workers help out with Medicaid or Medicare applications, and home support if people are transitioning back to their community.
Charlwell House partners with schools like Bridgewater State University and Galen College of Nursing, showing its place as a training site. Some programs here include Sepsis Smart, Falls Prevention, the Fight the Flu campaign, and efforts to cut down on unnecessary antipsychotic use. New rehab techniques are available, things like transcutaneous electrical stimulation and Omnicycle biofeedback, plus endurance, balance, and strength training, all measured by objective assessments so they can track progress.
But it's important to mention that the center's listed as a Special Focus Facility Candidate, meaning that regulators have reviewed it for a pattern of serious quality issues even if not officially flagged. Recent inspection reports list 93 separate deficiencies, including six related to infection control and others covering areas like resident assessment, care planning, and protecting personal information. Nurse staffing falls a bit under the state average, about 3.35 nurse hours per resident per day, with nurse turnover higher than is typical too. Quality and safety initiatives are in place to address these areas, and the center belongs to networks like Mass Senior Care, staying active in industry advocacy, policy committees, and continued staff training.
The community has received several awards over the years-Best of Senior Living, Best Activities, and Most Friendly among them-largely for its friendly, supportive staff and programming that tries to maximize independence and comfort. The focus, inside and out, remains on helping residents regain strength, plan care around each person's needs, and provide an environment that's clean and secure, with the end goal of returning folks to their homes or keeping them safe and engaged during their stay.