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Care Settings & Facilities

Group Home

A residential facility providing housing and supportive care for a small number of individuals with disabilities, behavioral health needs, or age-related conditions who require supervision but not hospital-level care. Staffing supports daily living, safety, and community integration.

What is a group home?

A group home is a residential setting that provides housing and supportive care for a small number of individuals who need supervision and assistance but not hospital-level medical care. Residents may include people with developmental or intellectual disabilities, behavioral health needs, or age-related conditions.

Staff in a group home support daily living activities, safety, and routines, often emphasizing independence and community integration. The environment is intentionally home-like and smaller in scale than an institutional facility.

Why do group homes matter as a care setting?

Group homes fill an important place on the continuum of care, offering ongoing support in a community setting for people who cannot live fully independently. They provide a less restrictive alternative to larger institutional care while still ensuring supervision and safety.

For the broader health system, group homes support stability and quality of life for vulnerable populations, which can reduce reliance on higher-acuity settings. Coordinating their residents' medical care with outside providers remains an ongoing operational consideration.

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