Warwick Living Center in Alma, Michigan, has a wide range of care for seniors, with assisted living, memory care, skilled nursing, short-term rehab, hospice, respite stays, and independent living for those 55 or older, all managed by the Michigan Department of Social Services. The community houses up to 174 residents, offering choices for private or shared rooms, each one fully furnished, plus a 24-hour call system and staff who help with things like bathing, dressing, and medication, with two-person transfer and insulin shots available if needed, after checking with staff. Folks get daily home-cooked meals and snacks in a big dining room with all-day, restaurant-style options, and dietary needs, like diabetes or high blood pressure diets, are handled if someone asks. Housekeeping, laundry, and dry cleaning come with living here. Residents can visit the on-site barber and beauty salon, spend time in the arts room, enjoy the reading room, or relax in the hot tub, sauna, or in garden and outdoor spaces. There are transportation services for doctor visits, shopping trips, or spiritual events, and move-in help for new arrivals.
Activities fill most days, with fitness classes, music and art programs, board games, pet and music therapy, movie nights, exercise groups, group outings, evening social events, and programs in creative arts and health. There's support for socializing, volunteering, and even adult day care if needed, plus recreation rooms and walking paths for quiet time or group fun. Seniors who need help because of memory loss can get specialized Alzheimer's and dementia care, and for those recovering from hospital stays, the rehab program helps with physical recovery for issues like brain or spinal cord injuries. As a skilled nursing facility, it supports seniors who need a lot of care and even has intermediate care for the especially frail. Payment covers private pay, long-term care insurance, Veterans Aid and Attendance, Medicaid, and Medicare, which helps some residents afford services. Assisted living starts at $3,000 a month. Support staff aim to give folks a home-like setting with programs meant to help each person keep some independence and stay comfortable, and even with all these offerings, every service gets adjusted to each person's medical needs and wishes.