St. Paul's Senior Living Community
339 EAST JAMESTOWN ROAD, Greenville, PA 16125
Featured Review
5
|
June 22, 2024
My sister moved to St. Paul's Senior Living Community. The staff is excellent. They are very attentive and the ratio of staff to patients is very good. The memory care facility has only ten patients in it right now, and they typically have between three or four nurses on staff. They have an excellent kitchen right on the floor just down the hall from the patient room. The food is very good. The kitchen staff is very attentive. They help patients get the food and help service them if they want. If they are not able to go to the dining area, they'll bring the food to the room. They encourage all the patients to go to join them for the activities. They don't force them to go but they strongly encourage them to go out and be with other people. They play games and puzzles. The facility is extremely clean and very well-kept. The grounds are very large and have lots of greenery.
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About St. Paul's Senior Living Community in Greenville, Pennsylvania
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
5.0
Overall
5.0
Quality
5.0
Staff
4.0
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Reviews of St. Paul's Senior Living Community in Greenville, Pennsylvania
4.6
(8 reviews)
Facility
4.8
Staff
4.7
Food
4.7
Activities
5.0
Value
4.3
Robert
5
|
June 22, 2024
My sister moved to St. Paul's Senior Living Community. The staff is excellent. They are very attentive and the ratio of staff to patients is very good. The memory care facility has only ten patients in it right now, and they typically have between three or four nurses on staff. They have an excellent kitchen right on the floor just down the hall from the patient room. The food is very good. The kitchen staff is very attentive. They help patients get the food and help service them if they want. If they are not able to go to the dining area, they'll bring the food to the room. They encourage all the patients to go to join them for the activities. They don't force them to go but they strongly encourage them to go out and be with other people. They play games and puzzles. The facility is extremely clean and very well-kept. The grounds are very large and have lots of greenery.
Constance
4
|
December 27, 2023
My father was in both the skilled piece and the rehab piece at Saint Paul Homes. It was a lot better experience than the other place. The people were a little bit shorthanded, but they always made sure that they answered questions, knew where he was, got him ready to come out of his room in the morning, and were much more attentive. He was in a shared room and it was clean. The food was better than where he was. They had pudding and cottage cheese. They had chicken and meatloaf. They had ice cream and you could have a hamburger. They had like a little side menu of things if people didn't like what they were having, that they could pick off of. I would recommend it. Everybody was nice and concerned. They seemed to care about the patients.
Amy
5
|
August 23, 2023
Saint Paul Homes is unusual in the sense that when you move in there at any given time, if your condition worsens, you are guaranteed a room in whatever facility you need. That's how they handle their patients there. I believe the patients will be given a wrist bracelet that will set off an alarm if they try to go out the door. The staff was very helpful, took the time with me, and the building itself is absolutely beautiful. My father is going to a private room, but it's small, only 300 sq. ft. It looks brand-new, with a nice spacious bathroom, and all brand-new features. They had a lot of outdoor gardens, and they were accessible to all the patients. Very beautiful. They are supposed to transport him to different appointments. They did walk me by an exercise room, complete with all the equipment.
Vicki
5
|
March 7, 2021
My dad has been in Saint Paul Homes once for rehab, and it was a good experience. It's probably the nicest one in our area, too. The rooms are very, very nice, the dining room is fantastic, and the staff seemed very good. You are getting a lot, but it is quite expensive for an average person. When he was there, he participated in some activities. He ate at the dining room for most of his meals, and he said the food was always good. He was also receiving therapy then because he was in rehab, so a lot of his daytime was spent with therapy. They had a community room for visitors where residents could go out and sit with them. My dad was in a room by himself. It wasn't large, but it had a recliner, a TV, and his own bathroom. The dining room on his floor was also pretty good-sized. It is quite a large facility, and it had a lot of different buildings depending on the level of care. Everything was very, very nice.
Maria771030
5
|
September 30, 2016
St Paul’s Nursing Home is nice, but my friend cannot afford to stay there. They were a good place -- clean and very friendly. It’s very well maintained, very nice, and organized. Nice neighborhood, very nice grounds.
Jerry541382
4
|
July 27, 2016
St. Paul’s was clean, and the food was good. It's a very large facility, and you had to park outside. They didn't have a pool. The staff was very competent. They had nursing care.
Bonnie106368361
5
|
February 19, 2015
I did not meet a lot of the staff other than the one who assisted me. She gave me a lot of material and explained how they have apartments that you can move in to. She explained all kinds of levels of care. It would be for my husband and me. St Paul Homes has homes that you could almost design yourself. They talked about the activities that they have. They say they take people who need to go to shop or events in the community on cars or buses. I've spoken to some people who live there. They have a person who showed me around her room. In the building where she lives, they all had small apartments with a bedroom and living room. The laundry room is communal down the hall. These were people who were quite able bodied that just didn't want to live alone. This woman has been there for eight years or so, and she couldn't say enough good things about the place. She apparently has time to volunteer, so she goes over to the Alzheimer's unit a couple of times a week. She assists over there in whatever way that she can. It is quite a large facility. I think I'll give it a pretty high score. Having been a social worker myself a few years ago, I saw a lot of facilities. I saw how nurses and staff work and how things got done or didn't get done. A lot of years ago, my mother was in another facility, and this place has really no comparison.
trishp1
4
|
December 22, 2012
The staff was friendly and helpful. The facility appeared clean and tidy and well organized. When we visited during lunch time the staff accommodated us at the lunch table. My young son was distracted by fish tanks and television screens keeping him busy during visits. It was nice to see little glass display cases outside each person's room which included a personal statement as well as family photos and prized possessions. When my grandmother was in better health she enjoyed the various programs offered by the facility and even sat on a couple of committees involved with fundraising and event organization. On the down side, there seemed to be little attempt to engage those seniors who seemed a little displaced from the community due to age or health issues. Some staff members unintentionally patronized my grandmother, treating her like a child by talking about her as though she couldn't hear. Nothing mean just condescending.
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