Home of Hope sits at 104 Dogwood Drive in West Pensacola, Florida, and offers senior care and assisted living with a focus on social services, and, though its roots go back to being a home for children since 1968, these days it's a licensed senior facility that serves up to 10 residents, and people find a range of care, whether they need daily help with dressing, bathing, medication, or specific support for memory loss like dementia or Parkinson's. The rooms come in several types, so folks can choose shared, semi-private, or private units, and the place has both one-bedroom and studio layouts, with safety features like non-slip floors and panic buttons, and it tries to make everyone comfortable, so it's pet-friendly and always has staff around to help if someone needs extra hands with eating, moving, or going to the bathroom. Home of Hope's staff can make individualized care plans, and there are caregivers trained in dementia and services like incontinence care, spoon-feeding, or help with transfers if someone can't walk well, and each resident can get occupational therapy and wellness monitoring, since regular health check-ups are part of life there.
There's a range of meals, including pureed and special diet choices, and a large library, snack shop, mealtime assistance, chef-prepared main meals, and snacks between meals, and the café is open to residents who want something lighter. Residents can bring dogs or cats, go out to the landscaped walking trails, enjoy the game room, relax in the courtyard, connect to wifi, or join regular entertainment, music, art, or exercise programs. Home of Hope holds special parties and has a schedule of movie nights, board games, music, and fitness classes, plus scheduled transportation for doctor visits, errands, or chapel services. Housekeeping like vacuuming, laundry, and linen changes happen regularly, and the maintenance crew takes care of apartments so everything runs smooth, with all utilities paid and high-definition TVs in rooms.
Home of Hope has extra support for people with complex needs like Alzheimer's, terminal illness such as brain cancer, or those needing short-term respite care to give family caregivers a break, and there's hospice care too. Security covers the facility, with full apartment oversight, fall prevention classes, and each room has a panic button for emergencies. Moving services, apartment upkeep, scheduled doctor visits, and help with medication are all standard, and there are special services for big occasions or when family members need to stay. The facility's license number is 10769, and it runs weekdays from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., keeping a spirit of hope and a caring environment thanks to a team that started with three mothers-Jane Hartley, Laura Cupp, and Ruth Smith-who built it as a refuge, and today, it continues with the same compassion for seniors in Pensacola and Escambia County.