Brinton Manor Nursing and Rehabilitation Center Glen Mills, PA
549 Baltimore Pike, Glen Mills, PA 19342
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About Brinton Manor Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in Glen Mills, Pennsylvania
Offering skilled nursing, medical and rehabilitative care for patients and residents. Whether for a short stay or for an extended period, our Clinical Care Teams are focused on implementing personalized care programs to facilitate recovery and improve well-being.
To learn more about this provider�s license and review other available state reports, please visit:
Pennsylvania Department of Human Services Provider Directory
Medicare
Health
2.0
Overall
3.0
Quality
5.0
Staff
2.0
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Reviews of Brinton Manor Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in Glen Mills, Pennsylvania
1.2
(5 reviews)
Facility
1.0
Staff
1.0
Food
1.0
Activities
1.0
Value
1.0
NotOnMyWatch
1
|
October 3, 2019
I had a friend who unfortunately was put in Brinton Manor by an uncaring family to live out their final days. In the 6 months I visited my friend I was appalled at the overall lack of care for the residents there. First, the personal living area for each resident is nothing more than your standard hospital room (circa the 1980s), with ANOTHER resident on the other side, separated by a curtain. Both use the same bathroom and shower, which is in the far front corner of the second resident's living area, forcing the other resident to walk past the separated curtain into their roommate's living area. So NO PRIVACY whatsoever. The worse part of it all is the size of what barely deserves to be called a "living space". I brought in a tape measure, as I was planning to buy a DVD player for my friend and find space for it by the TV. The space width wise my friend had for their bed, and all movement from the outside wall (wall of the hallway outside) to curtain separating their room mate, was 6 feet. The space from the far back wall that the head of the bed was against, to the closet a few feet away from the foot of the bed on the opposite wall, was a total of 12 feet. So you're talking about a total "living space" of 6 feet by 12 feet. In all of my visits to see my friend in those 6 months (once or twice a week), they were rarely checked on by any of the nurses (or anyone else). This is someone who was fighting (and dying) of cancer. My friends glasses broke, the arm came off. My friend repeatedly asked for assistance in getting the glasses repaired and for an appointment to be scheduled to see an eye doctor and get a new pair of glasses. This never happened and I bought an eye glass repair kit and fixed them best I could, reattaching the arm. An appointment was never scheduled or new glasses. I would ask at the nurses desk if it was being taking care of. Just received a BS non-answer. "We're working on it..." My friend also reported money being stolen from their bedside drawer. They give each resident a drawer with the crappiest little lock on it, that they carry a key for. The "lock" allows you to still open the drawer about half an inch. Anyone determined could easily pry it open and break the lock with a butter knife or some tool, if not just their bare hands. So my friend took to carrying all of their most important things on them at all times. Apart from the dismal living space, is the total absence of any real activities that are held for the residents. The best they get is BINGO day after day after day after day, and an "Ice Cream Social" from time to time, with two large brown economy tubs of lousy ice cream, where everyone gathers in the same room where the play BINGO everyday, and get to choose from vanilla and chocolate ice cream mixed, or strawberry. I spoke with the head of the "Recreation" department, who organizes the exciting BINGO and Ice Cream Social events about several free outdoor events/concerts in the summer that I thought the residents would enjoy and offered to make as much of the phone calls and arrangements possible myself to get them there. I knew one venue would definitely make special accommodations , them having a special road and unloading area especially for people in wheelchairs to get right up front at shows. She couldn't have been more dismissive or disinterested. I thought there'd be at least some excitement and discussion. Shot down immediately. I guess BINGO and Ice Cream is enough. My friend did tell me that from time to time they would take everyone out to dinner somewhere. I guess that's as good as it gets there. Residents pretty much just have to befriend one another and create their own "fun" it would seem. The shared community space inside is really nothing remarkable. The "nicest" thing is a very small sitting area outside, positioned in the center of the building, with some tables with chairs and a few small trees planted. Overall, it was just a very depressing place to be. The kind of place where just saying hello to someone in the hall and making eye contact, they would smile so big, just because you acknowledged them. My friend was not happy at all in there and told me so. Family never came to visit. Just dumped there to die. Sadly it is where my friend died. If you care at all for whoever you are looking to put into a permanent live in care "home", this place is as far as you can get from feeling like a home. There may have been better rooms there for some of the richer residents who could afford them, but I didn't see any. I just saw dismal hospital rooms. Holding cells for the old and dying. And as I said, apart from that, the total lack of interest and creativity in the "Recreation" for residents there is disgusting and depressing. To me, that is even more unforgivable than everything else. Just the fact that the place doesn't care enough to try and find more creative things and trips for the residents to take. It's not hard. It's called having a heart and caring. There are so many places around there that they could take them on the buses they already use for their dinner trips. Just people not caring enough or wanting to do their job. Imagine waking up each day with absolutely nothing new to look forward to. That's what being a resident there must feel like. Hopefully they won't take away their BINGO and Ice Cream Socials. Every time I drive by there I feel sad, think about my friend, and think how I need to let people know not to put their loved ones in there. I'm sure there are sadly worse places out there, but there has to be at least a few better places than this.
nadge
1
|
February 1, 2019
uncaring staff, nurses don't tell you the truth dietary department dirty and lukewarm meals, rooms and furniture are old shared bathrooms for 4 people kept unclean pt dept seems nice and hardworking medication was not ordered or given in timely fashion always said they had to wait for the pharmacy diabetics not checked on
Lola24
1
|
December 28, 2018
Please do not send a loved one here, It is dirty and short staffed. The DON Bridget is mean and ignores your requests. The unit manager Ellen is a bully nurse. Dirty linens stacked on beds. Dirty basins and wash cloths in sinks. My Mom's poor roommate crying because nobody helped her to the toilet. Food...well jail food is probably better. Please stay away. The nursing staff is terrible.
snaggle
1
|
July 20, 2015
Attractive on outside. Okay on inside. Parking inadequate. Access from Route 1 very tricky (need caution). But our biggest complaint is that we met with staff to get our loved one admitted. We were kept "hanging" for a phone call that never came. We were faithful in our weekly polite calls asking how things looked and were always told "should be a week or two and we will call you immedately". We visited again in person and heard one of the staff talking to two people and saying the exact words "should be a week or two". I turned around and walked out and we put our loved one somewhere else. Odd thing is..my friend's mother was admitted for rehab and they pushed to put her in long term. That's what they look for there...transition from rehab to long term. We were so patient six months and ended up disappointed. Would have rather been told "it's not happening".
Daddy's
2
|
February 23, 2014
I visited this facility very recently. The receptionist admissions director, and an occupational therapist were wonderful and made me feel welcomed. The outside of the facility was aesthetically more attractive than the inside. The resident areas smelled of urine or some other similar odor. The rooms I remember looked old and dingy. Mostly, I didn't like that adjoining twin bed rooms shared the same bathroom which means as many as four residents would share the same bathroom. The residents seemed okay. Lastly, where the facility is located [off a fast moving roadway] makes it easy to miss. If you do miss it, you'll drive a distance to make a suitable U-turn. After the U-turn, you have to drive pass the facility to be able to return to the road it's on. Even more frustrating was getting out of the parking lot on to the road which proved to be a very cautious adventure. I would give it 2 1/2 stars.
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