Ft Washington Health Center

Owned by C.r. Stoltz Irrevocable Trust
Fort Washington, MD • Nursing home ID 215146

What Families Need to Know

Registered nurse staffing
0.45 hours per resident daily
MD average: 0.69 hours daily
-35.0% less RN time than other MD facilities
Ranked #200 of 220 MD nursing homes for RN care
More RN time than 9% of MD facilities
Total nursing care
3.43 hours per resident daily
MD average: 3.62 hours daily
-5.0% less total care than other MD facilities
Ranked #151 of 220 MD nursing homes for total care
More total staffing than 31% of MD facilities
Quality & safety record
Quality rating: 5 out of 5 stars
28 problems found during recent inspections
Higher quality rating More problems
How to read this: RN hours focus on registered nurses (medical care). Total hours include all nursing staff. A facility can have high total hours but low RN hours—these measure different things.

Overall Score

36
Out of 100 (compared to other MD nursing homes)
Below average performance
Based on staffing levels, quality ratings, and inspection results

What Families Should Look For

Good nursing homes typically have:

  • More registered nurse hours
  • Higher quality ratings (4–5 stars)
  • Fewer inspection problems
  • Strong total staffing (more day-to-day attention)
Why this matters: Better staffing and quality scores are linked to safer, more attentive care for residents—and more support for families.

Better-Staffed Nursing Homes Nearby

Other MD nursing homes with more registered nurse hours per resident:

Better-staffed facilities in MD
Nursing homes in MD with higher registered nurse hours per resident per day

Understanding Nursing Home Terms

Registered Nurses (RNs): The most skilled nursing staff who can give medications and manage complex care.
HPRD: “Hours Per Resident per Day”—how much staff time each resident gets, on average.
Quality rating (stars): A 1–5 rating based on clinical outcomes and resident health.
Inspection problems: Issues found during official inspections—from minor paperwork to serious safety concerns.
LPNs / CNAs: Licensed Practical Nurses and Certified Nursing Assistants—vital hands-on care roles with different training levels.

Data sources: Official federal datasets from CMS (Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services) and PBJ (Payroll-Based Journal). Updated monthly. This information is for educational purposes and should not replace professional advice about care decisions.

Questions about this data? Learn how we calculate these scores or report an error.