Kingston Home Base Housing
Rehabilitation Centers in Kingston, Ontario
About Kingston Home Base Housing
Kingston Home Base Housing is dedicated to developing affordable, supportive, and transitional housing, emergency shelters, and essential support services for individuals and families at risk of homelessness in the Kingston area. Providing housing-related services since 1987, they aim to ensure everyone has a place to call home through a range of specialized programs.
Services Offered
- ✓ Apartment Listings
- ✓ Community Resources (incl. Kingston Shelters, Food & Grocery Help, Hotlines, Websites)
- ✓ Employment and Volunteer Opportunities
- ✓ Housing First
- ✓ Housing Help Centre
- ✓ In From the Cold Emergency Shelter
- ✓ Kingston Youth Services
- ✓ Lily’s Place
- ✓ Local Job Postings
- ✓ One Roof
- ✓ Supportive & Transitional Housing
Specializations
- Emergency Shelter
- Supportive Housing
- Transitional Housing
- Youth Services
Care Levels Provided
- Emergency Shelter
- Transitional Housing
- Supportive Housing
Hours of Operation
| Monday | 8:30a.m. – 4p.m. |
| Tuesday | 8:30a.m. – 4p.m. |
| Wednesday | 8:30a.m. – 4p.m. |
| Thursday | 8:30a.m. – 4p.m. |
| Friday | 8:30a.m. – 4p.m. |
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About Rehabilitation Centers in Kingston, Ontario
Families searching for rehabilitation centers in Kingston, Ontario typically weigh location, staffing, licensing record, monthly cost, and the way each community feels in person. Visiting more than once, asking about staff turnover, and reviewing the most recent state or provincial inspection report are the steps most likely to surface problems before they affect a loved one. The providers below serve the Kingston area; we encourage tours, calls, and questions before deciding.
About rehabilitation centers
Rehabilitation centers help adults recover from a hospital stay, surgery, stroke, or injury through physical therapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy, and skilled nursing. Inpatient programs (often inside a skilled nursing facility or a free-standing rehab hospital) provide intensive daily therapy; outpatient programs serve adults living at home.
What to look for in rehabilitation centers
For inpatient rehab after a hospital stay, ask the hospital discharge planner for facilities the hospital trusts and check Medicare Care Compare for star ratings and outcome measures (rehospitalization rate, successful discharge to home). Ask the facility how many therapy hours per day each patient typically receives — true inpatient rehabilitation hospitals provide three hours per day, five days a week; sub-acute rehab in a skilled nursing facility is usually less intense. Ask how often the medical director rounds and whether there is a doctor in the building overnight. For outpatient rehabilitation, ask about wait time for the first appointment, whether they accept your insurance, and whether therapy will be one-on-one or in a group setting. Verify the therapists' credentials.
Cost & payment
Medicare Part A covers up to 100 days of skilled-nursing rehabilitation after a qualifying 3-day hospital stay, with daily cost-sharing after day 20. Medicare Part B covers outpatient therapy. Private insurance and Medicaid generally cover rehabilitation when medically necessary; coverage depth varies. In Canada, hospital-based and publicly-funded outpatient rehabilitation are covered by provincial health plans.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between an inpatient rehabilitation hospital and a skilled nursing facility?
An inpatient rehab hospital (IRF) is licensed for intensive rehabilitation — patients receive at least 3 hours of therapy per day, 5 days a week, with daily physician oversight. A skilled nursing facility (SNF) provides lower-intensity rehab plus skilled nursing care, typically 1-2 hours of therapy per day.
Does Medicare pay for rehabilitation?
Yes. Medicare Part A covers up to 100 days of skilled-nursing rehabilitation following a qualifying 3-day hospital stay (with cost-sharing after day 20). Medicare Part B covers medically necessary outpatient therapy. Inpatient rehabilitation hospitals are also covered by Part A.
How long is a typical rehabilitation stay?
Inpatient rehab hospital stays average 10-14 days. Sub-acute rehab in a skilled nursing facility averages 20-30 days. Stays vary widely based on the condition, progress, and the patient's pre-hospitalization function.
What kinds of conditions are treated in rehabilitation?
Stroke, hip and knee replacement, cardiac and pulmonary recovery, traumatic brain injury, spinal-cord injury, amputation, and deconditioning after a major illness or surgery are the most common. The patient must be able to tolerate and benefit from intensive therapy.
Can someone return to rehab if they don't fully recover the first time?
Yes. Medicare coverage resets after 60 consecutive days without skilled care. Patients can also receive additional outpatient therapy or home-health therapy after the inpatient stay ends.