
Compare Memory Care around Springdale (Metro Area)
The information below is reported by the Arkansas Department of Human Services, Office of Long Term Care.
| Edgewood Health and Rehabilitation | MC NH RC | Springdale | 102
Facility
102
AR AVG
84
Rank
#125 / 330 | No |
37
Facility
37
AR AVG
34
Rank
#179 / 419 | A+ | Bob Martin | Cwnc Ops, Inc |
| Windcrest Health and Rehabilitation | MC NH RC | Springdale (Berryfield Apartments) | 70
Facility
70
AR AVG
84
Rank
#206 / 330 | No |
29
Facility
29
AR AVG
34
Rank
#240 / 419 | A+ | Miranda Hendrickson | Windcrest Health And Rehab, Inc |
| Magnolia Place Assisted Living & Memory Care | MC NH AL | Rogers | 140
Facility
140
AR AVG
84
Rank
#17 / 330 | No |
36
Facility
36
AR AVG
34
Rank
#191 / 419 | A+ | - | - |
| Village on the Park Rogers | MC AL IL RC | Rogers | - | No |
6
Facility
6
AR AVG
34
Rank
#363 / 419 | A- | - | - |
| The Bungalows at Springdale | MC AL RC | Springdale | - | No |
39
Facility
39
AR AVG
34
Rank
#165 / 419 | - | - | - |
| Springdale Health and Rehab | MC NH | Springdale | 140
Facility
140
AR AVG
84
Rank
#17 / 330 | No |
43
Facility
43
AR AVG
34
Rank
#142 / 419 | - | Cameron Roach | Northport Health Services Of Arkansas LLC |
| The Maples at Har-Ber Meadows | MC NH RC | Springdale | 140
Facility
140
AR AVG
84
Rank
#17 / 330 | No |
18
Facility
18
AR AVG
34
Rank
#302 / 419 | - | John Mcpherson | Nwa Nursing Center, LLC |
Edgewood Health And Rehabilitation is a 102-bed skilled nursing home in Springdale operates at full capacity on East Don Tyson Parkway in Washington County, Arkansas. Tracie Jones owns the facility, which Bob Martin administers. Most admissions, roughly two-thirds, are private-pay rehabilitation patients staying 1 to 2 months. Medicaid and Medicare fill the remainder, with long-term Medicaid residents comprising 61% of current census.
CMS ratings run high across most measures: 5 stars for health inspections (38.9% above average), 5 stars for quality measures (35.1% above state), and 5 overall (58.7% above average). Yet staffing carries a 1-star designation (7.7% below average), a rating that reflects a structural problem rather than occasional lapses.
The facility maintains zero registered nurses in direct clinical roles; only administrative RN Director positions exist. This creates predictable deficiency patterns. In November 2024, state inspectors cited failure to have a registered nurse work 8 consecutive hours daily, hand hygiene breaches during meal service and personal care, and missed barrier precautions for a resident with pressure ulcers.
Over four years of state oversight, the facility has recorded 32 deficiencies, 52% above the average. Inspection patterns cluster around infection control, medication management, care plan implementation (particularly bathing and feeding assistance), and dietary safety.
Two complaint investigations in 2023 substantiated privacy failures during medication administration, unsanitary conditions with torn furnishings, improper medication storage, and systematic hand-hygiene lapses among dietary staff.
No severe sanctions materialized; no immediate jeopardy findings, no fines, no payment denials. All cited deficiencies were corrected.
Long-stay residents experience low rates of functional decline (22% better than state), rare pressure ulcers (53% better than state), and minimal antipsychotic medication use (86% better than average). Falls with major injury, however, occur in 5.8% of long-stay residents, nearly half again the average.
Rehabilitation outcomes for short-stay Medicare patients are weaker: only 41.8% of residents achieve expected self-care ability at discharge (22% below average), and fall rates during short stays sit at 1.2%, nearly double the average.
Staffing composition includes 15 licensed practical nurses, 64 certified nursing aides, and 40 contractor therapy professionals (26% contractor dependency).
Payroll consumes 37.2% of revenue; below the 47–60% benchmark for well-staffed facilities.
The community offers therapy gym, outdoor courtyard, activity spaces, communal dining, and salon services.
Admissions are supported by 24-hour nursing and respite services.
The facility provides rehabilitation or memory care with strong regulatory ratings but with acknowledged staffing and compliance challenges requiring ongoing attention.
Windcrest Health and Rehabilitation’s inspection record presents a stark disconnect from its four-star CMS rating.
An October 31, 2024 survey cited eight deficiencies. Since 2022, the facility accumulated 46 total deficiencies (119% above average), averaging 11.5/year (117% above state). Inspections flagged recurring themes: medication management failures, resident care lapses, and environmental sanitation problems. Twenty-nine moderate-severity citations recorded; 0 critical or serious.
No federal penalties imposed despite deficiency volume.
Located at 2455 Lowell Rd, Springdale, AR 72764 (Washington County), this 70-bed facility is privately owned by Kimberly Burner and administered by Miranda Hendrickson. CMS-certified for Medicare and Medicaid. BBB rating A+ (not accredited).
Walk score 29 indicates limited walkability.
Financial picture: 2023 revenue $7.2 million with net profit $250.6 thousand (3.5% margin). Payroll $3.3 million represents 45.2% of revenue, ranked #88 of 181 Arkansas facilities.
Occupancy 81.7%, 10.4% above average, ranked #44 of 183 facilities. Average length of stay 360 days reflects long-term care focus. Current census 49 heavily weighted toward Medicaid (95.9%).
Total adjusted nursing 5h 3m/resident/day ranks 36th of 182 facilities, exceeding state average by 6%. Licensed practical nurses provide 1h 7m/day, 18% above state average.
However, registered nurse hours measure only 11 minutes/day, 54% below average of 24 minutes. This severe RN deficit is mirrored by critically low weekend RN at 9m/day (44% below state).
CNA coverage 2h 36m sits 5% below state.
Total staff of 84 includes single RN paired with 3 RN directors, 12 LPNs, 31 CNAs. Staff-to-resident ratio 1.71:1 is 8% better than the state average.
CMS Overall rating is 4 stars (27% above state). Health inspection 4 stars (4.2% above state). Quality measures 5 stars (35.1% above state).
Long-stay outcomes demonstrate strength: falls with major injury 0.5% (87% better than state); functional decline 26% better; depression and antipsychotic use substantially lower than state. Hospitalization rate 2.46/1,000 days registers 25% worse than state. Short-stay falls equally strong at 0%.
Services include memory care, respite, short-term rehab, and therapy specialties; amenities include dining, activity area, courtyard, therapy gym, and salon with active resident council.
The facility’s excellence in quality measures and long-stay outcomes stands in tension with a substantial inspection history of medication errors, care lapses, and environmental deficiencies.
Known as an inviting assisted living and memory care community in Rogers, Arkansas, Magnolia Place offers senior residents a nurturing environment where they can truly flourish. What sets them apart is their unwavering commitment to providing personalized care tailored to each senior resident’s unique needs. With a dedication to improving the well-being of each individual, this community stands as a place where senior residents thrive, thanks to the thoughtful and holistic care provided.
At Magnolia Place, Person-Centered care and Life Enrichment Programs are the cornerstones of their philosophy, all aimed at enhancing the quality of life for senior residents. Their primary goal is to create an empowering environment where senior residents can make healthy choices, honor their dignity, and foster well-being. This commitment is reflected in their all-inclusive assisted living and memory care options. Set in a charming small town, this location captivates with its picturesque 400 acres of forest, 24 parks, and 70 miles of greenways and bike trails.
A vibrant community to spend your retirement years, Village on the Park Rogers is a warm and welcoming environment where residents can feel at home. Life at the Village houses independent living, assisted living, and memory care living options– all catered with customized care. Residents are guaranteed to live comfortably and securely with the helpful support and easy accessibility that has become their standard for senior living. Management and staff are encouraged to be with their residents every step of their journey.
Village on the Park is an engaging community that has beautifully designed its living situation with convenient amenities: every apartment with a spacious and bright floor plan, and all utilities are included except telephone, cable, and internet; an outdoor grilling and barbeque station, and walking trails. Their services include planned activities and events, scheduled transportation, housekeeping and linen services, and local physicians and specialist visits.
The Bungalows at Springdale is a senior living community near the Ozark Mountains of Northwest Arkansas. Access to natural beauty and rich history allows residents to enjoy a serene and enriching environment. This assisted living community is close to medical centers, hospice care, shopping, dining, and other necessities, making life convenient and comfortable for senior residents. Whether embracing the beautiful surroundings or receiving top-notch care, The Bungalows at Springdale offers seniors a meaningful retirement living experience to cherish.
At The Bungalows at Springdale, residents can get access to a fully furnished living space, with access to shared spaces such as a fireside lounge, library, and public and private dining rooms. They also have a bistro, an art studio, and a full-service salon. The home also features lovely raised garden beds and paved walking paths. Their care staff are dedicated to offering individualized support in the privacy of residents’ apartments. They also provide 24-hour skilled nursing and physical, occupational, and speech therapies to support residents’ health and well-being.
Springdale Health and Rehab have proven an efficient rehabilitative approach to skilled nursing services that enhance their quality of life. Offering a better alternative to long-term care, the well-trained care staff delivers a multidisciplinary approach to nursing when providing tailored care– ensuring service with compassion, kindness, and professionalism. Springdale Health and Rehab strives to be the nursing home in the city that gives the best standard of care.
With an emphasis on long-term and rehabilitative care, the center offers physical therapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy, wound care, restorative nursing, IV therapy, cardiac recovery, and orthopedic care; with services such as transportation, housekeeping, and laundry– to name a few of the features that residents from both living options get unlimited access to.
NWA Nursing Center, LLC operates The Maples at Har-Ber Meadows, a 140-bed nursing home located at 6456 Lynchs Prairie Cove in Springdale, Arkansas. John McPherson serves as the administrator for the property, which has been in business for 28 years and currently houses 111 residents at a 79 percent occupancy rate. Stays average 153 days, showing that the daily operation splits its time between temporary post-hospital rehab and long-term residential stays.
The surrounding area relies heavily on cars, scoring just 18 out of 100 for walkability, so visitors will need a vehicle to reach the property. On the floor, the nursing crew delivers an average of 4 hours and 50 minutes of direct, hands-on care to each resident daily. This 24-hour team of registered nurses, practical nurses, and assistants manages physical therapy routines and temporary respite care.
For daily life, a certified dietary manager runs the kitchen to address personal food preferences and allergies, while additional campus amenities include an outdoor courtyard, social activities, and an on-site hair salon.
Prospective representatives can contact the front office to ask about current room openings or get details on the intake process. The administrative staff can also explain how the team manages recent findings from government health inspectors, whose regular safety audits noted past compliance issues with medication administration, staffing consistency, and infection control procedures.
Ranking Methodology
How we rank these memory care communities
Every community above is evaluated across six weighted categories using public data including state inspection records, review platforms, BBB profiles, and operator-published materials.
Weighting overview
- 35%Resident Experience
- 25%Regulatory
- 15%Visual Media
- 10%Website
- 10%Stability
- 5%Environment
01
Resident & Family Experience 35%
The single largest share of every ranking. Aggregated review sentiment and volume from major platforms — the closest signal to real resident experience.
- Includes
- Review Sentiment
- Review Volume
02
Regulatory & Safety Record 25%
State inspection records, citations, and complaint visits. We weight per-inspection rates more heavily than raw counts.
- Includes
- State Inspections
- Citations/Inspection
- % Inspections w/ Citations
- Complaint Visits
- Accreditations
- BBB Rating
03
Visual Media & Transparency 15%
Communities that publish high-quality visuals give families a real preview. No photos or tours = a negative transparency signal.
- Includes
- Video Tours
- Virtual Walkthroughs
- Photo Quantity
- Photo Quality
04
Website & Operator Transparency 10%
Site quality and whether the operator publishes basic accountability information — staff names, contact details, ownership.
- Includes
- Website Content
- Mobile Usability
- Staff Info Available
- Owner Info Available
05
Community Stability 10%
Operational signals indicating whether a community is well-run and meeting demand.
- Includes
- Occupancy Rate
- Bed Options
06
Environment & Pricing 5%
Walkability and pricing transparency. Walk Score is weighted higher for Independent Living than for Memory Care, where most residents do not leave unaccompanied.
- Includes
- Walk Score
- Pricing Transparency
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Frequently Asked Questions about Memory Care in Springdale, AR
What is the average cost of memory care in Springdale, AR?
The average monthly cost of memory care in Springdale, AR is approximately $4,750. Actual rates vary by community, level of care, and floorplan.
What is the price range for memory care in Springdale, AR?
Memory care in Springdale, AR typically ranges from $3,500–$6,000 per month, depending on the community, room type, and care needs.
What is the typical staff-to-resident ratio at memory care communities in Springdale, AR?
Memory care communities in Springdale, AR typically operate with a staff-to-resident ratio in the range of 1:5–1:8.
What's the difference between assisted living and memory care in Arkansas?
Assisted living in Arkansas supports residents with daily activities (bathing, dressing, medication management) while preserving independence. Memory care is a specialized form of assisted living for residents living with Alzheimer's or dementia, and adds 24/7 secured environments, dementia-trained staff, and structured routines designed to reduce confusion and wandering.
Does Arkansas Medicaid cover memory care?
Arkansas Medicaid does not directly pay room-and-board for memory care, but most states (including Arkansas) offer Home and Community-Based Services (HCBS) waivers that can offset the cost of care services delivered inside a licensed community. Eligibility, waitlists, and covered services vary — check directly with the state Medicaid agency.
What is memory care?
Memory care is a specialized form of assisted living for residents living with Alzheimer's disease or other forms of dementia, with secured environments, dementia-trained staff, and routines built to reduce confusion and wandering.
How many memory care communities are listed on this page?
This page features 7 memory care communities in Springdale, AR. Use the filters and comparison tools above to compare ratings, amenities, and pricing.









