Medicare and Medicaid · Escambia County
Century Center For Rehabilitation And Healing
6020 INDUSTRIAL BLVD, Century, FL 32535 · 8502561540
Overall rating
5/5
Century Center For Rehabilitation And Healing is a for-profit nursing home in Century, FL with 88 licensed beds. CMS rates it 5 out of 5 stars overall — above average for Florida nursing homes. Subcategory scores: staffing (4/5), health inspections (5/5), quality measures (4/5).
Are you the owner or manager of this facility?
Claim your profile to respond to families, update your listing, and unlock featured placement.
How this home is rated
CMS data last updated May 1, 2026
About this home
- Capacity
- 88 beds
- Ownership
- For profit - Limited Liability company
- Type
- Medicare and Medicaid
- County
- Escambia
What the Ratings Mean
Century Center For Rehabilitation And Healing holds a 5-star overall rating from CMS, which is the highest possible score. That overall rating pulls together three separate scores: health inspections, staffing, and quality measures. When those pieces are strong across the board, the overall rating reflects a facility that is consistently performing well, not just excelling in one area while falling short in another.
The 5-star health inspection rating is particularly reassuring for families. It means state inspectors found very few issues during their visits, and any citations that did come up were minor in nature. On the staffing side, the 4-star rating tells you nurses are spending more time with residents than at most facilities, which matters a great deal for day-to-day comfort and safety. The 4-star quality measures rating means the facility is tracking above average on 15 different health outcome indicators, things like how well residents maintain mobility, manage pain, or avoid infections. Taken together, this is a facility where the care environment, the people providing that care, and the actual health outcomes for residents are all performing at a high level.
Staffing at a Glance
Century Center For Rehabilitation And Healing provides more registered nurse time per resident than most Florida nursing homes, with RNs spending about 0.65 hours per resident each day compared to the state average of 0.52 hours. That extra RN attention can matter when a resident needs clinical judgment or a condition changes unexpectedly. However, when you look at total nursing hours across all staff types, the picture shifts a bit. Residents here receive about 3.53 total nurse hours per day, which falls a little short of the Florida average of 3.87 hours. In practical terms, that means there may be slightly fewer hands-on caregiving moments throughout the day from aides and other support staff, even though the higher-level nursing coverage is solid. Neither number tells the whole story on its own, so it is worth asking the facility directly how they schedule staff across different shifts, especially overnight and on weekends when coverage can look very different from daytime hours.
Inspection & Penalty History
Century Center For Rehabilitation And Healing has a clean record when it comes to government oversight. The facility holds a 5-out-of-5-star health inspection rating, has never received a government penalty, and has no fines on record. For families, that's a genuinely reassuring sign. It means inspectors have consistently found this facility to be meeting care standards, and regulators have had no reason to step in with formal enforcement action. No record is perfect forever, and it's always worth visiting in person and asking questions, but this track record is one of the stronger ones you'll come across. You can compare this facility's record against others in Century on the Century nursing homes and assisted living page.
Questions to Ask When You Visit
- How many residents is each certified nursing assistant responsible for during a typical day shift and a typical night shift?
- If my loved one has the same CNA assigned to them most days, how long has that person worked here, and what does turnover look like for direct care staff overall?
- Walk me through what happens, step by step, if a resident falls or has a medical emergency in the middle of the night.
- Can you show me the most recent state inspection report, and how were any cited problems corrected?
- What does a typical weekday actually look like for a resident who does not want to stay in their room all day?
- If my family member is unhappy here or feels they are not being treated well, who do they tell, and how do you make sure that complaint does not just disappear?
"For more guidance on evaluating facilities, see our guide to questions to ask when choosing a Florida nursing home."
Not sure yet?
Talk to someone who can help
You don't have to figure this out alone. A placement specialist will reach out to walk you through your options — at no cost, no pressure.
