Scoring for the rating system is
based on information obtained from federal health inspection surveys,
quality-of-care data, and staffing information.
In order for a nursing home to receive a 5-star rating all of the data
must show that the nursing home is performing well above average; while
conversely, a 1-star score indicates that a nursing home is performing well
below average.
The initial scoring revealed the
following:
- 66% of nursing homes received two to four stars
- 22% of nursing homes received just one star
- 12% of nursing homes received five stars
More recent scoring from the
15,670 nursing homes in our database revealed the following:
- 1 Star = 2,109 = 13.58%
- 2 Star = 3,059 = 19.69%
- 3 Star = 3,082 = 19.84%
- 4 Star = 4,256 = 27.40%
- 5 Star = 3,026 = 19.48%
Also, don’t use this information
as the be-all, end-all for your nursing home search. Check out user ratings. Find out what the current residents of the
nursing home have to say about their living conditions.
Below are the results of our
24,009 user ratings:
- 1 Star = 10,545 = 43.92%
- 2 Star = 2,033 = 8.47%
- 3 Star = 1,248 = 5.20%
- 4 Star = 1,935 = 8.06%
- 5 Star = 8,248 = 34.35%
When looking into the overall
rating of a nursing home, you would be well-advised to take this information
into account. Check out the overall
federal score of each nursing home that you might be considering. Then, break that down and find out why that
nursing home received that specific score.
Is there not enough staff? Are
the facilities not well-maintained?
These are all important aspects that are reviewed during federal
inspections.
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