25 Best Nursing Homes in the U.S.

In this piece, we will take a look at the 25 best nursing homes in the U.S. For more nursing homes, head on over to 5 Best Nursing Homes in the U.S.

Aging is an inevitable part of human life. We all start young and grow old and each phase of life comes with its benefits and drawbacks. The main dilemma of life is that for those who don't have massive fortunes to their name, their youth is spent toiling away to earn wealth, and when the time comes to spend it, one is too old to utilize the experience that life provides through living.

In the Western world, there is a greater emphasis on independence than in the Eastern world. This leads to a belief that one has to move away from one's parents in order to live life fully, particularly in the U.S. On the flip side, countries such as China have higher levels of filial piety, where children are expected to take care of their parents when they grow old. Therefore, nursing homes that provide care and community to the elderly are far more prevalent in Western countries. The best of these have staff trained to meet the specific needs of senior citizens, and they enable people who do not want their parents to live with them or elders who do not have anyone to care for them to avail of these facilities to ensure comfortable living.

However, not all is well in the nursing home industry. According to a report from the National Academies, the manner in which nursing homes are financed and managed is "ineffective." It outlines that a large portion of this is due to the fact that nursing homes are unable to require suitable talent and face higher levels of employee turnover since they pay less than hospitals. It shares that registered nurses in nursing homes make $10,000 less on average than nurses in acute care hospitals. It also adds that the coronavirus pandemic laid bare the inadequacies in the system, as thousands of people died in nursing homes.

To build more on this, a report from the Kaiser Family Foundation - a nonprofit that conducts research on healthcare in America - shows that the number of deaths in the facilities of both residents and care staff was simply staggering. It shows that as of January 2022, more than 200,000 people had died in long term care facilities in America, which represented more than one fifth of the total coronavirus deaths. The bulk of these deaths took place between May 2020 and June 2021, the peak of the virus, with 14,000 people dying between July 2021 and January 2022.

Taking a broad look at the nursing home industry in America, data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) shows that as of 2018, there were 15,600 nursing homes in the U.S. Out of these, 70% were for-profit facilities and all the facilities had 1.7 million beds in total. Nursing homes also served more than twice the amount of people as residential care facilities. They had 85 residents per day on average, higher than the 32 residents per day for residential care and 65 participants in adult daycare centers.