St. Luke's Sunrise Care Center in Crosby, North Dakota, sits at 705 4th Ave SE and has 16 beds for seniors who need help with daily living, offering skilled nursing, medical services, and long-term care with a team that includes doctors like Benjamin Krogh, DO, and nurse practitioners such as Stanley Stevens, FNP-C, and Christine Knudsvig, FNP-BC, with leadership from CEO Cody Barnhart. The center is part of a bigger community that includes St. Luke's Hospital, which is a 20-bed critical access hospital, and St. Luke's Crosby Clinic, a rural health clinic, so it provides access to both emergency care and routine medical help, letting residents stay close to needed resources, and it's recognized among the top 20 critical access hospitals in the country for best practice in quality.
The care center focuses on patient safety, quality improvement, and risk management, following high standards set by groups like CMS Star Ratings, and it tracks things like hospital readmissions and infection rates to keep care as safe as possible. Staff provide help with transfers, bathing, dressing, medication, and daily activities any time of day, using a 24-hour call system and emergency alert setup for safety, and they welcome residents on Medicaid or Medicare. There's dining with restaurant-style options all day, and special meals for people who need allergy-sensitive or diabetes-friendly food, along with a dining room that's open for everyone.
Rooms have telephones, and the center offers laundry and dry cleaning, making daily life simple, and the facility is kept clean and easy to move through, including for those who aren't able to walk on their own. Residents can use garden spaces for fresh air, walk the paths for exercise, relax during movie nights, or visit the on-site barber and salon for hair and grooming, while the arts room keeps people busy with crafts and creativity, and community-sponsored events or resident-run activities help folks stay social.
The care center's services cover assisted living, independent living, memory care, skilled nursing, hospice, and home health, and residents can get therapy if they need it. Support and referral services are there to guide families, and the center encourages residents and their families to create a personal list of preferred providers using a "My List" feature, which makes it easier to keep everyone involved in care decisions. St. Luke's Sunrise Care Center offers direct communication with healthcare providers without sharing or selling personal information, and the staff also send and receive eCards to help residents keep in touch with friends and family. The whole setup aims to make things straightforward, comfortable, and safe for seniors, especially those needing help every day, while keeping families informed and involved.