Beaufont Health & Rehabilitation Center sits at 200 Hioaks Road in Richmond, Virginia, and has 120 licensed beds where people get both skilled nursing and rehabilitation care, and you know, since it's part of Medical Facilities of America and sometimes called LifeWorks Rehab Center, people call it a LifeWorks Rehab Center, and there are a lot of caregivers and real staff, not contractors, with a team that includes doctors, nurses, and therapists. Some of the administrators listed have been Justin Kelly, Christina Wiley, and Mr. Jonathan Terrell, so you might see different names, but they share the same address and website. The place mainly helps with recovery from surgeries, strokes, heart attacks, and illnesses, and it offers a LifeWorks Rehab® Recovery Program too, which is all about giving people therapy for 2-3 hours a day, up to seven days a week, and uses tools like the Recovery Map™ and Personal Report Card™ so residents and families know how things are going.
The therapy gym is modern, with advanced equipment and technology, and they work hard to make care plans personal and fit each resident's needs, whether someone's there for short-term rehab or longer stays. They take infection control seriously, so you see signs everywhere about masks, hand cleaning, and vaccines, and they follow COVID-19 visitor rules, although they try to keep visiting open when it's safe. It's wheelchair friendly and helps people who need special rehab after knee or hip surgery, and the staff supports all sorts of therapy, plus there are several amenities meant to make people comfortable, and they have parking and restrooms on site for visitors, plus the building itself is wheelchair accessible-pretty useful if you really need it.
Rooms come in both private and semi-private, with daily rates at $329 for private and $311 for semi-private, and folks can pay with credit cards. The place is listed with the Virginia Health Care Association and the Virginia Center for Assisted Living, and it gets included in all the Virginia nursing facility guides. With 89.8 full-time equivalent staff members and 40,859 patient days counted for the past year, the numbers say there's always someone there to provide support, though, once again, people are coming and going. The community offers different services and types of care, so if someone needs basic long-term nursing care or more short-term help after an accident, they've set up programs to handle both. If you want to look into how the center works or what's available, they keep general info for visitors, and the website offers more details for anyone curious about specifics.