Nodaway Nursing Home sits in Maryville, Missouri and provides care to seniors who need nursing help, rehab, or memory care, and with 60 beds for Medicare and Medicaid patients, folks there get help with bathing, dressing, medication, and transfers whenever they need it, and the building's got sprinklers and a 24-hour call system for safety, which is always good to see, and while the place changed hands in the last couple of years, it's kept going since 2010, taking Medicaid all the while. The staff's around with about 3.39 nurse hours and 0.3 staff hours per resident daily, and Nodaway got a staff score of 3 out of 5, which matches its health audit rating, but the quality rating on clinical measures sits up at 5 out of 5, and Medicare gave it an overall 4 out of 5. There's been no substantiated complaints or fines, which tells something about how things are run, and people can see a resident council or family council if they've got concerns. The nurses and professional staff handle everything from stroke recovery to diabetes management, cardiac therapy to rehab and hospice care, doing wound care, IV antibiotic therapy, blood administration, and things like X-rays and radiation therapy without sending folks off-site. The place stays steady with long-term residents and takes short-term folks for post-acute care, and with laundry and housekeeping done by staff, folks don't need to worry about cleaning up or finding meals - a professional chef and meal planners look after food, and folks sit down together to eat, even if someone needs a special meal for diabetes or allergies, they'll get set up.
Rooms come furnished, some with private baths, cable TV, air conditioning, Wi-Fi, high-speed internet, and even a kitchenette here and there, so it's comfortable, and the grounds have walking paths, gardens, and outdoor spots if folks want a little air or sun, and when it gets wet or cold, there are activity rooms, arts and crafts, music programs, fitness rooms, movie theater, and plenty of planned activities or community events. Pets are allowed with some rules, and the staff helps everyone with move-in coordination, so new arrivals aren't left to sort things by themselves. The blood vaccination rate for residents stays up around 91.6%, so most folks have their shots, and they've got memory care, nursing care, and services for seniors with health conditions needing supervision 24/7. Medical transport's available, so doctor visits and hospital trips don't cause a fuss, and transportation and parking keep it easy for family or visitors. As of November 2023, Medicare called the place a solid B, and the folks working there focus on keeping a friendly, joyful, and helpful atmosphere, making sure nobody feels left out or forgotten. They focus on keeping quality high and respond to feedback through the councils, so changes do happen when needed, and the long operation and steady ratings show they're not new to this kind of care.