Saltar al contenido
Un Lugar para MamáUn Lugar para Mamá
DAY_CENTER

Centro de día de la Residencia Santa Ana, Santoña

Santoña, Cantabria3.9/ 5

Sobre este centro

Residencia con capilla, terapias con animales y completos servicios sanitarios. Amplios jardines y actividades para el bienestar integral.

Información de contacto

Santoña, 39740 Cantabria

Facilidades

  • Capilla
  • Jardín
  • Gimnasio
  • Comedor
  • Sala de actividades
  • Zonas comunes
  • Ascensor
  • Calefacción
  • Aire acondicionado

Servicios

  • Servicio religioso
  • Terapia con animales
  • Enfermería
  • Fisioterapia
  • Psicología
  • Trabajo social
  • Animación sociocultural
  • Talleres y actividades
  • Centro de día

Titularidad

Privada

Calcula tus ayudas para este centro aquí

Opiniones

El Centro de día de la Residencia Santa Ana presenta graves problemas de gestión y cuidado que generan profunda preocupación entre las familias. Aunque hay testimonios aislados elogiando la dedicación de algunos profesionales como Rocío, la mayoría de reseñas denuncian negligencia médica, falta de personal cualificado, maltrato a residentes, ocultamiento de incidentes por parte de la dirección y un modelo de atención que prioriza la velocidad sobre el bienestar humano. Las acusaciones incluyen desde diagnósticos incorrectos y medicación inadecuada hasta presuntos abu

  • d L

    I'd give it neither an asterisk nor a star. I went in thinking it was a care home… and it turns out to be some kind of geriatric obstacle course with catering included. The lack of staff isn't a minor detail; it's the business model. There are so few caregivers that you expect to see someone juggling while serving dinner. And, surprise: people without the proper qualifications doing tasks that aren't theirs to do. After all, what could possibly go wrong? The pace is worthy of Formula 1: express breakfast, lunch in turbo mode, dinner in a sprint, and everyone off to bed as if they were collecting pieces after a game. More than people, they seem like parts on an assembly line. If you blink, they've already "optimized" the affection. The management, however, has mastered the art of escape. Houdini would be proud. They don't even work to tell the time, but they perfectly manage their strategic disappearance when they need to support the team. The staff who actually want to care end up overwhelmed, with no time for something as revolutionary as human attention. Because here, the clock rules, and empathy lags behind. In short: more circus than health center. All that's missing is the popcorn.

  • Nuria Ruiz

    In this nursing home, there are nurses who beat the elderly, and the director covers it up. Don't bring your family members. My mother-in-law had dementia, and when she mentioned it, we didn't believe her (how can you imagine something like that) until it was discovered. Let's take it step by step. 1. As I describe in the review, the person in question is my mother-in-law. 2. If you've been the director of this nursing home for a while, you know better than anyone what goes on inside. 3. The fact that there hasn't been a complaint doesn't mean the incidents didn't happen. If no complaint was filed in the end, it's because you or the previous director convinced part of the family to calm things down, and because we moved my mother-in-law to another nursing home.

  • Eva Hazas

    My father, who has dementia, was hospitalized last year, and his improvement has been impressive. The care and professionalism are evident. I have nothing but gratitude for you. Thank you so much.

  • Gema Solana

    I haven't seen Rocío for a while, my father has been here since September, and I really wanted to highlight her involvement, her affection, her treatment of my father, others and the families because it seems that she is a great person and professional. I hope to see her there soon because people like that are the ones we want for our families, people who like their work and enjoy it. Thank you!

  • l B

    My grandmother was there for four months, well, not even that long... Let's start from the beginning. It began with a terrible cold in April. The nurse told us it was just a dry cough that would go away, but it kept getting worse, so I spoke with the nursing home, the nurse, and her family doctor to have her transferred to Laredo Hospital. We arrived, and after a few hours, a doctor told us she had pneumonia and had to be admitted. They discharged her, we took her back to the nursing home, and in June she stopped eating and didn't talk much. We found out they were giving her Haloperidol 10 drops. My grandmother weighed 40 kilos... The nurse told us it was advanced dementia (impossible since she knew all of us). On July 8th, I took her from the nursing home to see if she would eat at home. Araceli, the director, came out to tell me that, of course, poor thing, she already had advanced dementia, that the nurse had mentioned it, and that she also had a vaginal yeast infection (something I didn't know). All this time, I took my grandmother home with a huge bump on her head and covered in cuts and bruises. They were supposedly going to call us for even the smallest injury (a lie). We arrived in Laredo and they told me she needed to be sedated; she had internal bleeding and dysphagia, not advanced dementia. They also added that she had a vaginal yeast infection from wearing diapers for so long. We went to the nursing home morning and afternoon, every single day. Imagine if we hadn't gone!