Medicare and Medicaid · Pinellas County
Oak Manor Healthcare & Rehabilitation Center
3500 OAK MANOR LANE, Largo, FL 33774 · 7275819427
Overall rating
4/5
Oak Manor Healthcare & Rehabilitation Center is a for-profit nursing home in Largo, FL with 180 licensed beds. CMS rates it 4 out of 5 stars overall — above average for Florida nursing homes. Subcategory scores: staffing (3/5), health inspections (3/5), quality measures (5/5). The facility has incurred $4,017 in government fines — review the penalty history below.
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How this home is rated
CMS data last updated May 1, 2026
About this home
- Capacity
- 180 beds
- Ownership
- For profit - Limited Liability company
- Type
- Medicare and Medicaid
- County
- Pinellas
Government Penalties
$4,017 total fines- 2024-01-25 — Fine · $4,017
What the Ratings Mean
Oak Manor Healthcare & Rehabilitation Center holds a 4-star overall rating, which means it performs above average compared to nursing homes nationwide. That overall number is a composite of three separate ratings, and it's worth understanding what each one tells you. The 5-star Quality Measures rating is the strongest piece of the picture, and it carries the most weight in day-to-day care. It's based on 15 clinical indicators like how well residents maintain their mobility, avoid infections, manage pain, and stay free from pressure sores. A top score here suggests the facility is doing a genuinely good job at the hands-on work of keeping residents healthy. The Health Inspection rating comes in at 3 stars, meaning the facility is about average when it comes to the number and seriousness of issues state inspectors flagged during their visits. It's not a red flag, but it's worth asking the facility directly about any recent citations. Staffing also sits at 3 stars, which means residents get a roughly average amount of nurse time relative to the number of people living there.
Taken together, the ratings suggest a facility that performs well where it counts most clinically, while falling closer to the middle of the pack on inspection history and staffing levels. For families, this means Oak Manor is likely a solid choice for rehabilitation and care outcomes, but it would be reasonable to ask about nurse-to-resident ratios and any recent inspection findings before making a final decision.
Staffing at a Glance
Oak Manor Healthcare & Rehabilitation Center provides about 3.58 hours of total nursing care per resident each day, which falls a bit below the Florida average of 3.87 hours across Florida nursing homes. The registered nurse coverage is where the gap is more noticeable: residents here receive roughly 0.39 RN hours per day compared to the state average of 0.52. In practical terms, that means a little less time each day with a higher-credentialed nurse who can catch changes in condition, coordinate care plans, and respond to more complex medical needs. The remaining nursing hours come from LPNs and aides, who handle much of the hands-on daily care. This does not necessarily mean care is inadequate, but families should feel comfortable asking the facility how they handle staffing during busy periods and what their nurse-to-resident ratio looks like on a typical evening or weekend shift.
Inspection & Penalty History
Oak Manor Healthcare & Rehabilitation Center has a middle-of-the-road health inspection rating of 3 out of 5 stars, which suggests the facility meets basic standards but has room for improvement. There is one government penalty on record, with a fine of $4,017 issued in January 2024. A single penalty of this size is relatively minor in the context of nursing home oversight, but it does indicate that inspectors found at least one issue serious enough to warrant a financial consequence within the past year or two. Families should ask the facility directly about what the penalty involved and what steps were taken to correct it. That conversation can tell you a lot about how seriously a facility takes accountability. Families evaluating this facility can compare it to others in Largo on the Largo nursing homes and assisted living page.
Questions to Ask When You Visit
- How many residents does each certified nursing assistant care for during the day shift, and does that number change at night or on weekends?
- How long have most of your nursing staff been working here, and what do you do to keep turnover low?
- Can you walk me through exactly what happens if a resident falls or has a medical emergency in the middle of the night?
- How does the facility handle a resident who starts showing signs of depression, withdrawal, or a sudden change in behavior?
- What does a typical weekday look like for a resident who can still get around on their own, and how is it different for someone who needs more physical help?
- If I have a concern about my family member's care, who do I talk to, how quickly can I expect a response, and what happens if I feel like the issue was not resolved?
For more guidance on evaluating facilities, see our guide to questions to ask when choosing a Florida nursing home.
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