Building photo courtesy CRISTA |
Their original goal was to have everyone placed by August 31, 2020 but they were able to move everyone by mid-August.
According to a statement by Glen Melin, CRISTA Vice President for Senior Living,
It has been CRISTA’s experience that financing and operating a viable skilled nursing care center has become increasingly challenging for all providers, and particularly for single facility operators such as CRISTA.
While CRISTA is blessed to currently hold a Four-Star Quality Rating from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), the call to meet or exceed ever-developing quality and safety requirements while adapting to modified reimbursement payment models designed to reduce Federal costs has proven unsustainable for CRISTA.
They vowed to make strides to help the staff find other jobs.
CRISTA’s two retirement communities – the Cristwood Retirement Community in Shoreline and Crista Shores in Silverdale – will continue to operate as continuing care retirement communities (CCRC). They report that they have had no COVID-19 cases in these facilities.
The rehab center was one of the first with an outbreak of novel coronavirus, early in the pandemic. A KUOW story in April reported.
After “multiple” residents of a wing at a CRISTA Senior Living center in Shoreline tested positive for the virus, officials there arranged on March 29 to test everyone who lived or worked on that wing, symptoms or no.But the virus had beaten them to the punch: 26 residents and 16 staff had COVID-19, the tests revealed.
King county reports 17 COVID-19 deaths associated with the Rehab center, which includes patients, employees and visitors without specifying how many of each. CRISTA did not respond to a request for clarification of COVID-19 numbers.
This is so sad to hear. My dad was well cared for at this center for 8 years. It was the best place in the Shoreline area. God's blessings on all of the employees and residents as they move to new places.
ReplyDeleteI want to be sympathetic to the community there but you can tell leadership is not investing in the facility. And they are focussed on taking a stand against homosexuality to their own detriment. The money makers are the residential units, the large complex. All the other housing is somewhat marginal and does not keep up with industry standards. If the executive team could reinvest in housing there and stop alientating people, that community could recover. Just my two cents. I wonder if enrollment is down due to their political standd against non-heterosexuals.
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