Medicare and Medicaid · Broward County
Regents Park Of Sunrise
9711 W OAKLAND PARK BLVD, Sunrise, FL 33351 · 9545724000
Overall rating
3/5
Regents Park Of Sunrise is a for-profit nursing home in Sunrise, FL with 120 licensed beds. CMS rates it 3 out of 5 stars overall — average for Florida nursing homes. Subcategory scores: staffing (4/5), health inspections (2/5), quality measures (5/5).
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How this home is rated
Source: CMS Care Compare, last updated May 1, 2026
About this home
- Capacity
- 120 beds
- Ownership
- For profit - Corporation
- Type
- Medicare and Medicaid
- County
- Broward
What the government rating says
3
out of 5
CMS stars
Regents Park Of Sunrise holds a 3-star CMS rating — average for a Florida nursing home. The facility meets federal requirements but does not rank in the top tier. The sub-category breakdown below shows where it performs well and where there is room for improvement.
Health Inspections
2/5
Below average — notable inspection findings
Staffing
4/5
Good — above-average nurse hours per resident
Quality Measures
5/5
Top tier — among best outcomes in Florida
What the Ratings Mean
Regents Park of Sunrise holds an overall 3-star rating from CMS, which puts it in the average range nationally. That overall rating is a composite of three separate scores, and in this case those scores tell a pretty mixed story. The health inspection rating comes in at 2 stars, meaning state inspectors have found more citations, or more serious ones, than you'd see at a typical facility. That's worth looking into - you'd want to ask the facility directly about what was cited and what steps they've taken to address it. On the staffing side, the facility earns 4 stars, which means residents are getting above-average nurse time relative to the number of people living there. More staff time generally translates to more attentive, responsive care day to day.
The brightest spot here is the 5-star Quality Measures rating, the highest possible score. This reflects how residents are actually doing across 15 clinical and physical health indicators - things like pain management, mobility, and avoiding preventable hospitalizations. A top score there suggests the care being delivered is producing strong real-world outcomes for residents. So while the inspection history is a flag worth exploring, the staffing and especially the quality outcomes paint a more encouraging picture. Families should weigh all three pieces together rather than focusing on just one number.
Staffing at a Glance
Staffing at Regents Park of Sunrise is fairly close to the state norm in some areas, but there is a gap worth knowing about. Registered nurse coverage comes in at 0.51 hours per resident per day, which is just a hair below the Florida average of 0.52, so that difference is essentially negligible in practice. Where the gap is more noticeable is in total nurse hours, which include aides and licensed practical nurses. Residents here receive about 3.46 total nurse hours per day compared to the Florida average of 3.87 across Florida senior care facilities. In a practical sense, that roughly half-hour difference per resident per day can add up across a full shift, potentially meaning slightly less time for help with meals, mobility, or personal care during busy periods. It is not a dramatic shortfall, but families caring for a loved one with higher needs may want to ask the facility how they handle staffing during nights and weekends, when coverage tends to be thinner everywhere.
Inspection & Penalty History
Regents Park of Sunrise has a 2-out-of-5-star health inspection rating, which is below average and worth paying attention to. This rating reflects findings from state and federal inspections and suggests the facility has had more cited issues than most. That said, there are no government penalties on record, meaning inspectors have not found violations serious enough to result in formal fines or sanctions. For families, the picture here is mixed - the inspection history warrants a closer look and some pointed questions during a tour, but the absence of penalties is a genuine positive. You can compare this facility's record against others in Sunrise on the Sunrise nursing homes and assisted living page.
Questions to Ask When You Visit
- How many residents does each certified nursing assistant care for during a typical day shift and a typical night shift?
- What percentage of your nursing staff are regular, full-time employees versus agency or temporary staff, and how often do residents see the same caregivers from week to week?
- Can you walk me through exactly what happens if a resident falls or has a medical emergency in the middle of the night?
- How do you handle a resident who is showing signs of depression, withdrawal, or a sudden change in personality?
- What does a typical Tuesday look like for a resident who has moderate mobility and enjoys being around other people?
- If I have a concern about my loved one's care, who do I contact, how quickly can I expect a response, and what happens if I feel the issue has not been resolved?
For more guidance on evaluating facilities, see our guide to questions to ask when choosing a Florida nursing home.
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