Daycare center in queens: The 10 Best Adult Day Care Services in Queens County, NY for 2023

Опубликовано: September 8, 2023 в 4:33 am

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Категории: Miscellaneous

The 10 Best Adult Day Care Services in Queens County, NY for 2023

  1. Senior Living
  2. //

  3. Adult Day Care
  4. //

  5. New York
  6. //

  7. Queens County

To help you with your search, browse the
5 reviews
below for
adult day care services
in Queens County.
On average, consumers rate adult day care in Queens County
3.0
out of 5 stars.
Better rated regions include
Kings County
with an average rating of
5.0
out of 5 stars.

Caring.com has helped thousands of families find high-quality senior care. To speak with one of our Family Advisors about
adult day care options and costs in
Queens County,
call
(855) 863-8283.

Browse Adult Day Care by city:

Location

Dry Harbor Nursing Home

Provides: Adult Day Care

61-35 Dry Harbor Road , Middle Village, NY 11379

“Dry Harbor Nursing Home and Rehabilitation Center is a senior care facility with a wide range of services and amenities. Staff, which includes physical therapists and nurses, are friendly, and the…” More

“Dry Harbor Nursing Home and Rehabilitation Center is a senior care facility with a wide range of services and amenities. Staff, which includes physical therapists and nurses, are friendly, and the…” More


Chapin Home for the Aging

Provides: Adult Day Care

165-01 Chapin Parkway, Jamaica, NY 11432

“Chapin Home for the Aging is a senior living facility located in the Jamaica Hills neighborhood of Queens, New York City’s largest borough. Jamaica Hills, home to an estimated 12,657 residents who…” More

“Chapin Home for the Aging is a senior living facility located in the Jamaica Hills neighborhood of Queens, New York City’s largest borough. Jamaica Hills, home to an estimated 12,657 residents who…” More


Regal Heights Rehabilitation

Provides: Adult Day Care

7005 35th Avenue, Jackson Heights, NY 11372

“Regal Heights Adult Day Health Care Program is great, the staff is well trained and professional. My friend is currently attending the program, they are well trained in Alzheimer and Dementia. I…” More

“Regal Heights Adult Day Health Care Program is great, the staff is well trained and professional. My friend is currently attending the program, they are well trained in Alzheimer and Dementia. I…” More


Hillside Manor Adult Day Health Center

Provides: Adult Day Care

188-11 Hillside Avenue, Jamaica, NY 11423

“This living facility is awesome. They have such a great program for the residents to meet with high school students from The Mary Louis Academy and build a bond every Thursdays throughout the…” More

“This living facility is awesome. They have such a great program for the residents to meet with high school students from The Mary Louis Academy and build a bond every Thursdays throughout the…” More



Rego Park Adult Day Health Care

Provides: Adult Day Care

42-34 Saull Street, Flushing, NY 11355

“Good for rehab: bad for long-term.
My grandmother stayed in this facility for 2 months undergoing rehab for a broken ankle. She received good, attentive care and the nurse assistants were…” More

“Good for rehab: bad for long-term.
My grandmother stayed in this facility for 2 months undergoing rehab for a broken ankle. She received good, attentive care and the nurse assistants were…” More


Margaret Tietz Adult Day Health Care …

Provides: Adult Day Care

15813 72nd Avenue, Flushing, NY 11365

“I wish I had known before sending my father into Margaret Tietz that their facility was not as their web site suggests, caring and kind with the cute little hearts. The nursing staff was unkind,…” More

“I wish I had known before sending my father into Margaret Tietz that their facility was not as their web site suggests, caring and kind with the cute little hearts. The nursing staff was unkind,…” More


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Peninsula Nursing & Rehabilitation Ce…

Provides: Adult Day Care

5015 Beach Channel Dr, Far Rockaway, NY 11691

“Welcome to Peninsula Nursing & Rehab Center! Just blocks away from historic Far Rockaway Beach, our fully renovated Peninsula Nursing and Rehabilitation Center is, without a doubt, redefining…” More

“Welcome to Peninsula Nursing & Rehab Center! Just blocks away from historic Far Rockaway Beach, our fully renovated Peninsula Nursing and Rehabilitation Center is, without a doubt, redefining…” More


    Other Options in Queens County, NY

    • Assisted Living
    • Home Care
    • Nursing Homes
    • Home Health Agencies
    • Senior Living
    • Senior Care

    Adult Day Care near Queens County, NY

    • Kings County
    • Bronx County
    • New York County
    • Nassau County
    • Hudson County
    • Bergen County

    Recent Reviews of Adult Day Care in Queens County

    More Options near Queens County, NY

    • Assisted Living in Brooklyn, New York
    • Assisted Living in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
    • Memory Care in Allentown, Pennsylvania
    • Memory Care in Westbury, New York
    • Senior Living in Brooklyn, New York
    • Senior Care in New York, New York

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    Queens Daughter Daycare

    Queen’s Daughters was originally founded in 1903 and has been providing affordable, quality childcare and education for

    over 100 years!

    Supporting education and innovation from Infants, 18 months to 5 years old.

    Infants 18 months-2years old: An interactive experience where toddlers learn and grow. During their most pivotal years of life, we encourage your little ones to learn through exploration, sensory activities, and songs! 

    Preschool 3-5 years old: A program designed to foster independence, responsibility, and confidence in multiple areas of growth.

    As a Kindergarten readiness program, we equip future scholars with basic cognitive and developmental skills to ensure their success in the next phases of their lives!

    We serve the families and children of North Yonkers and play a significant role in their education and development. Our staff and administration team provide opportunities for parent involvement, outreach and donations, and schoolwide events. Queen’s Daughters serves as a staple in the City of Yonkers and we will continue to impact the lives of every child that enrolls in our center!

    Universal Pre-K 3 & 4 now available .

    Get your child started as soon as possible with Pre-K registration.

    Our Universal Pre-K program, through Yonkers Public Schools is a fundamental program that scaffolds children’s learning and development that prepares them for Kindergarten and grades after. The educators of our UPK program push their students to their fullest potential and implement mature lesson plans using the Creative Curriculum/ Department of Education Units of Study. To enroll, click the link below and register your child for Yonkers Public Schools. To select us as the location you wish for your child to attend, make “Queen’s Daughters” your first school choice!

    Enroll in Pre-K

    Get Screened

    Helpful things to keep in mind

    School Supplies List

    Our arrival cut off time each morning is 9am unless a parent or guardian has notified the school office.

    A drop off and pick up routine will be established at the time of our reopening and staff members will be assigned multiples tasks to help this transition run smoothly as possible. 

    Sick Policies

    Every staff member and child will have their temperatures taken and documented every day upon arriving to the center.

    Masks

    Face covering, hand hygiene, cough etiquette, cleanliness, and sanitation will be rigorously practiced.

    Classrooms

    We’re practicing social distancing to keep both our staff and your children safe.

    Children will be assigned to the same classroom each day and staff rotation will be limited among the same group.

    Each group of children will stay in a separate room, to the extent possible.

    TELL US WHAT YOU THINK

    Contact

    Feel free to contact us with any questions.

    Email
    [email protected]

    Phone
    (914) 969-4491

    Russian scammers arrested in New York

    Members of a criminal group suspected of embezzling $18 million destined for poor children were arrested in New York on the morning of Tuesday, August 9th. Among the detainees are Russian-speaking immigrants who owned a network of kindergartens, and employees of city departments who received bribes from them.

    According to the federal prosecutor’s office for the Southern District of New York, the investigation began in 2007, when the owners of more than 30 kindergartens – Lyudmila Umarova, Lyudmila Grushko, Yana Kruglaya and Rimma Volovnik – launched their fraudulent plan. The object of their attention was the program of subsidizing the stay in kindergartens of children of low-income parents. While this program is jointly funded by city and federal agencies, including the US Department of Health, it is implemented by three New York City agencies. Under the program, children from low-income families are placed in private kindergartens, which are paid by the state for each child. To participate in the program, kindergartens must have special accreditation and meet established standards.

    According to prosecutors, Lyudmila Umarova, who lives in Brooklyn in the same house where her two kindergartens are located, was at the center of the conspiracy. Two more kindergartens, located in the same Brooklyn block, belong to Umarova’s daughter. Umarova also has close ties to other Russian-speaking kindergarten owners in Brooklyn and Staten Island. As stated in the accusatory documents at the disposal of the Russian service of the Voice of America, the participants in the conspiracy called each other members of the “congregation”.

    According to the prosecution, Umarova and other suspects paid bribes to employees of the city departments, who “attributed” children to their kindergartens, for whom the state program then paid. In fact, these children never visited these establishments, and neither they nor their parents knew that their names were being used to enrich anyone. Bribes ranged from a few hundred to tens of thousands of dollars.

    One of the employees of the New York city department of human resources, Leonid Gutnik, allegedly admitted that he received from Umarova a “salary” of a thousand dollars a month, and from Grushko – one hundred dollars for each child whom he “attributed” kindergartens owned by her. Gutnik, in particular, admitted that he regularly reviewed the lists of people who applied for financial assistance, and, having found Russian surnames in these lists, passed this information on to Umarova, who, in turn, included children with Russian surnames among her clients.

    Gutnik also “attributed” to the kindergartens of his accomplices the children who ended up in shelters for the homeless, although these children never set foot in “Russian” kindergartens. Judging by the accusatory documents, shortly before the arrest, Gutnik began to cooperate with the investigation and agreed to record his conversations with one of Umarova’s relatives, but Gutnik told his wife about this, and she, in turn, warned Umarova’s daughter. In total, according to the prosecutor’s office, Gutnik received bribes from his accomplices for about one hundred thousand dollars.

    The “left” earnings of another employee of the New York City Department of Human Resources, Alexei Vasiliev, were much less – only a few hundred dollars and a couple of valuable gifts, including a black leather wallet.

    Employees of the city health department also participated in the criminal conspiracy, who were connected with the Russian defendants not by language or origin, but, obviously, by a thirst for profit: among those arrested are Aurora Villareal, Dionne Rivers-Ettu, Emil Nehala and Carolyn Eason. They allegedly assisted kindergarten owners in obtaining the necessary licenses, permits and other formalities. Maria Rapaport, a former employee of the city administration for children, was also arrested.

    In recent days, the city health department has inspected all the kindergartens belonging to the “congregation”. Six of them were closed for various violations, including fire safety and sanitary regulations, as well as for the use of unqualified and unlicensed employees.

    All of those arrested are charged with bribery, and all of them, with the exception of Vasiliev, face 20 years in prison and substantial fines. The charges against Vasiliev are less serious, and the maximum term that threatens him is 5 years.

    According to Rose Gill Herne, head of the New York City Investigation Department, “if the allegations are proven, it would mean that the suspects were pursuing their own materialistic interests instead of protecting the interests of children.” “Public funds were stolen and honesty and decency were completely forgotten,” she said. “However, the Investigation Department, together with our federal partners, uncovered this criminal conspiracy and stopped corruption. We will continue to work with our colleagues in federal law enforcement to protect children and taxpayers from criminals who use welfare programs for personal gain.”

    Read about events in America here

    Soviet old people went to “kindergarten” in America

    BOSTON/NEW YORK, October 22 – RIA Novosti, Larisa Saenko. Breakfast, gymnastics, a swimming pool, a computer literacy lesson, lunch, a walk, a meeting with a poetess – this was the daily routine of this institution, which can only be described as a kindergarten for elderly Russian-speaking emigrants.

    You can go here a couple of times a week, or you can go for five days. A day for one person in such American day care centers for the elderly costs an average of $ 150, but its visitors go for free – institutions are funded by the state or philanthropists.

    Holidays with national characteristics are regularly held here and it is usually fun. But at one of the last banquets, not all Soviet pensioners liked red caviar – people expressed dissatisfaction. Some of the inhabitants threatened that they might not come here again, alerting the staff.

    For the Soviet elderly have not lost the feeling of a team – out of solidarity, a group of like-minded people immediately leave the establishment, moving on to a competitor.

    “Kindergarten,” working Russian Americans shrug their shoulders, listening to similar stories of their elderly parents.

    “Kindergarten” is the name given to these centers by the elderly themselves, who go there according to a real kindergarten schedule, returning home in the evening.

    As in an elite institution for kids, transport is sent for them.

    The compact Russian community of pensioners in Boston is a unique social phenomenon that has taken shape due to an incredible combination of historical and political circumstances in a country where the word “socialism” is almost a dirty word.

    Thanks to the famous Jackson-Vanik amendment, which the United States will cancel today or tomorrow as a political rudiment, these pensioners were able to leave the USSR, gaining the enviable status of a pensioner-refugee, social housing for the elderly, pensions, and benefits that they never dreamed of in the USSR.

    “Khrushchev promised communism to this generation, and the Americans delivered it. Old people here can only be envied,” says Alexander Borochin from Newton, whose mother-in-law and stepfather go to kindergarten.

    He started his life in exile from scratch – he painted the facades of buildings in the 40-degree humid heat in Memphis, after a shift he threw off his sweat-soaked clothes and went to deliver pizza for half the night. Now he works as a computer engineer, has a house, teaches his daughter in college. But working time still does not count – if the boss said it is necessary, then you can work both at night and on weekends. Communism does not “shine” in his old age – he has to earn everything.

    Rich poor

    Walks in the “kindergarten” for Russian old people are always offered in several ways.

    “I usually choose shopping for a walk. And let the children criticize me that I bought another vase on sale, but I really want to. After all, I didn’t have anything like that in the Soviet Union. And now life is good – like a dream,” – says Lidia Tsylova, who has worked all her life as a foreman in the workshop of the Minsk State Printing House.

    Lydia raised two daughters alone in a “Khrushchev” lorry, and the family never had an extra ruble for vases and bowls. On her dressing table in a spacious Boston “kopeck piece” in a pensioner’s house, there is still an unopened bottle of Red Moscow perfume – a symbol of Soviet glamor, brought from her homeland.

    Lidia Tsylova is the most typical representative of the generation of Soviet emigrants who arrived in the US as pensioners. Their children bit into the unfamiliar system of capitalism, did not shy away from black cheap work, received new specialties, competed for jobs, moved up the social ladder, learning in practice what a “mortgage” (mortgage) and a university loan are.

    “Life is beautiful, but not easy,” admits her youngest daughter Anna, a nurse.

    She had to retrain three times in the last 17 years in order to find a well-paid job. For the “American dream” bought on credit – your own townhouse in the vicinity of Boston – you have to work hard.

    By American standards, pensioner Lidiya Tsylova is a low-income person, since she lives only on social benefits. But according to her own ideas, she is richer than ever.

    “Poor people in America get as much as we do. But it would never occur to me to buy myself a cup of coffee for $2. I’ll buy myself a whole jar for $3 and drink coffee at home for a month. We’ll make 100 out of one cent” , – Lydia shares her little tricks.

    She marvels at the way of life of the “poor Americans” around her, who eat fast food instead of at home, buy Pepsi and chips instead of cereals and flour with food stamps, and go to a tailor to sew on a button.

    Indeed, it seems strange for a generation of unspoiled Soviet old people who did absolutely everything with their own hands – from cooking dinners, sewing dresses, knitting socks, and re-pasting wallpaper and repairing cars.

    In accordance with the teachings of Marxism, the inhabitants of the Boston “utopia” do not own any property, and do not seek it. They are satisfied with social housing – a multi-storey building for pensioners – without frills, but with dignity and as in a commune: everyone is together, everyone is equal.

    Personal credit

    Elderly residents of the “Russian community”, as a rule, have little integration into the realities of the United States, they stay in a community of their own kind, are tied to Russian TV channels, prefer Russian stores, are aware of the latest news about Alla Pugacheva and Dima Bilan , and completely passionate about the same Russian show. Mentally, they live in the post-Soviet space.

    Inhabitant of the Boston Russian “kindergarten” Yakov Narodnitsky is 90 years old. The professional journalist from Mogilev-Podolsk always hoped deep down that he would live under communism. After all, the first secretary of the Central Committee of the CPSU Nikita Khrushchev announced in October 1961 years at the Congress of the CPSU that by 1980 the material base of communism will be created in the USSR.

    “I was so happy when the USSR overtook the US in terms of iron production! According to estimates, it turned out that communism could indeed be built somewhere in the 80s,” the veteran recalls.

    Traveling around the collective farms, he saw both poverty and mismanagement, but he hoped that things were going better in other parts of the big country.

    Now he is sure that in the individual competition he has already realized the fundamental principle of communism – “from each according to his abilities, to each according to his needs.”

    “My options are, frankly, limited… But I have everything I need. Only for my medical needs last year, 100 thousand dollars were spent from the budget – I calculated it,” the former reporter assures.

    Three years ago he mastered the computer, now he often “hangs” on the Internet – he reads the news, corresponds with his relatives. I used to go to “kindergarten” with my wife. After her loss, life in public is the only cure for longing. He does not speak English. And he takes his soul away in the circle of former comrades in arms – in the club of Soviet veterans of the Great Patriotic War.

    Narodnitsky served throughout the Great Patriotic War as an artillery battery commander, and ended the war with the rank of captain with four orders on his chest.

    Second Wind

    There are nearly five thousand senior day care centers in the United States, with about 150 thousand people visiting each day. This is a compromise that allows the elderly to live independently of their children, but not in a nursing home. Such day care centers are often created in the USA for people united by a common diagnosis, but more often it is just a close social community.

    “A kindergarten for the elderly is a great thing. It has everything – both jokes and dancing. You can even find a boyfriend,” says Serafima Levitsaya, 81 years old.

    At first she did not want to go to the “kindergarten” – according to old memory, from the experience of her pre-war childhood, when her mother drove her to the garden with nettles. Then she reached out after the others to the team of compatriots.

    Seraphim feels like a very needed person. She is a volunteer – she knits blankets for “babies” from low-income families as a gift. Recently I recognized “my own” in a stroller with a black baby and was very happy – it means that she is not trying in vain.

    The woman herself comes from the Bryansk region, but she left the Baltic States for the USA, where she lived for many years – there came a time when the Russians became strangers. In America, the English word “business” was pronounced for a long time as “busines” – it sounded very Lithuanian.

    Recently, her son went for the first time to his historical homeland in Unecha, which Seraphim always described so romantically, and returned disappointed. He did not find anything from the stories of his mother, who left the Bryansk region more than half a century ago.

    “He says there is nothing ancient and wooden pavements, only five-story buildings around,” the woman shrugs.