Kin On Health Care Center
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Kin On Health Care Center
Kin On takes a true whole-team approach to helping our Asian community age well at home or thrive in our residences. We do this by offering a culturally sensitive continuum of care. If Kin On doesn't offer a solution, our Care Navigator Team will work with you to find one. From cooking and cleaning to companionship and caregiver support, help is readily available at your doorstep.

Rehab at home or at Kin On with our multilingual staff including Cantonese, Mandarin, Toishanese, Vietnamese, Tagalog, and Korean. Fitness, arts & crafts, technology, health education and a variety of free programs to help you thrive.
Services
We've always stayed true to our Asian roots. In 1985, we launched the nation's first bilingual Chinese-American nursing home catering to the unique cultural and dietary needs of Asian elders. Over the years, Kin On continues to expand, offering home care, caregiver support services, assisted living apartments and Healthy Living classes.
We build open, honest, and respectful relationships so we can perform at the highest level for our customers. We are "One Kin On." Being accountable to ourselves, our customers, our community, and our business partners empowers us to hold others to be accountable. Personal integrity comes first.

Service excellence starts with everyone working together to consistently deliver authentic smiles and satisfaction for residents, customers, and each other.We treat everyone like family, and it shows. Our actions make a difference-today and into the future. Therefore, we act wisely, invest in ourselves and our team, and focus on what we can do today to make tomorrow better.
We are committed to helping Asian elders stay connected to their community and living safely at home for as long as possible. Kin On offers one of the most comprehensive sets of services that enable elders to live at home safely, securely, and with maximum dignity. Our Healthy Living Program offers classes to get people out of the house, learning new things, making new friends, and moving their bodies.
The key to aging in place successfully is ensuring daily physical and social needs are met. Kin On Home Care is licensed by the Washington Department of Health to do exactly that - help people age successfully at home. This program provides assistance with personal hygiene, daily-living tasks, and household chores for physically challenged and chronically ill clients.
Caring for a family member can be a daunting responsibility. In fact, research shows that family members who provide care to individuals with chronic and disabling conditions are themselves at risk for higher levels of depression, stress, and heart disease.

The Kin On Family Caregiver Support program offers caregivers the support they need to successfully care for ones they love, while getting the self-care they need to stay happy, healthy, and effective in their caregiving.Family Support Services are provided in multiple languages: English, Cantonese, Mandarin, and Vietnamese.
Reviews (2)
K. B.
K. B.
Nov 23, 2021
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Wouldn’t recommend this place to anyone.. all the elderly residents are just wondering and are not being watched, going to the bathroom on there own, crawling on the floor on the beds, getting up and out of wheel chairs. Not to mention the English workers can’t even understand them and look traumatized during the entire process. They had some sort of students there who only spoke English i don’t want my family being taken care of by students who are left unattended and can’t even speak our language !!!!! None of the workers want to be there and are not gentle what so ever.
Annie Lui
Annie Lui
Sep 25, 2021
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Equipment here is broken. Nobody keeps a close eye on the elderly there. Had to demand what was going on, before seeing any kind of change. Screaming happens here. Not recommended.
Update: 2021
The elderly rarely have anything to do. They just wander about or stay in bed all day. The residents share a room with one other tenant, similar to hospital rooms. The English-speaking staff do not want to be there, it's very apparent when you call them and they sigh on the phone or when you get someone unfriendly at the front during visitation. I've seen canned tuna as part of the main meals for some