Peaker Park Care Village
At a Glance
The information you need to decide whether this home warrants a closer look.
Nursing homes
Staff warmth score
of reviewers answered yes
Good to know
- Registered beds137
- SpecialismsCaring for adults over 65 yrs, Caring for adults under 65 yrs, Dementia, Mental health conditions, Physical disabilities, Sensory impairment
- Last inspected2019-11-19
- Activities programmeThe home maintains high standards of cleanliness throughout, with families consistently noting how well-kept everything is. Outdoor spaces give residents and visitors places to enjoy fresh air together. The different units each have their own character while maintaining the same attention to cleanliness and comfort that families appreciate.
- Visit Website
The Evidence
What the review data, the inspection reports, and the dementia-care evidence base tell us about this home.
What families say
Families describe how staff help new residents settle surprisingly quickly, especially those arriving from difficult hospital stays or unsuitable previous care settings. The teams adapt thoughtfully to each person's preferences — whether that means encouraging someone to join activities or respecting their wish for quiet time in their room. What stands out is how staff check on residents who prefer their own company, making sure they're comfortable without being intrusive.
Based on 31 Google reviews · 0 reviews on carehome.co.uk · most recent 2026-04-10
The eight family priority themes
- Staff warmth72
- Compassion & dignity72
- Cleanliness70
- Activities & engagement65
- Food quality65
- Healthcare70
- Management & leadership75
- Resident happiness68
What inspectors found
Inspected 2019-11-19 · Report published 2019-11-19 · Inspected 4 times in the last three years
Is this home safe?
{"found":"The safe domain was rated Good at the January 2022 inspection, representing an improvement from the previous rating. The published summary does not provide specific detail about staffing levels, medicines management, falls processes, or infection control practices. A July 2023 review of available information found no evidence requiring a reassessment of this rating. With 137 beds and a complex mix of needs including dementia and mental health conditions, safe staffing and consistent practice matter considerably here. The absence of specific findings in the published text means the Good rating stands, but families cannot draw detailed conclusions from what has been published.","quotes":[],"family_meaning":"A Good safety rating after a previous Requires Improvement is reassuring, but it does not tell you what specifically changed. Good Practice research consistently identifies night staffing as the point where safety most commonly slips in larger homes, and agency reliance is a known risk factor for inconsistency. In a home of 137 beds with a dementia specialism, you should want to know how many permanent staff are on the dementia unit overnight, and how often agency staff cover those shifts. The inspection findings do not answer these questions, so you will need to ask directly.","evidence_base":"The Good Practice evidence base (IFF Research and Leeds Beckett University, 61 studies, March 2026) finds that night staffing ratios and agency staff usage are two of the strongest predictors of safety outcomes in larger care homes, particularly those supporting people with dementia.","watch_out":"Ask the manager to show you last week's actual staffing rota for the dementia unit, not the template. Count how many shifts were covered by permanent staff versus agency staff, and ask specifically what the overnight carer-to-resident ratio is on the dementia floor."}
Is the care effective?
{"found":"The effective domain was rated Good at the January 2022 inspection. The published text does not include specific detail about training standards, care plan quality, GP access arrangements, or how the home manages nutrition and hydration for people with complex needs. The home supports adults with dementia, mental health conditions, physical disabilities, and sensory impairment, each of which requires tailored staff training and care planning. No specific examples of effective practice, staff training records, or care plan content are described in the available published findings.","quotes":[],"family_meaning":"For your mum or dad, effective care means staff who know their individual history, health conditions, and preferences, not just their diagnoses. Good Practice research identifies care plans as living documents that should be reviewed regularly with family input, not filed and forgotten. The inspection does not tell us how often care plans are reviewed here or whether families are routinely included. With a dementia specialism, you should also ask what specific dementia training staff have completed and when they last refreshed it, since training quality varies considerably between homes.","evidence_base":"The Good Practice evidence base highlights that dementia-specific staff training, including recognition of non-verbal communication and understanding of changed behaviour, is strongly associated with better outcomes for people living with dementia in care homes.","watch_out":"Ask to see your parent's care plan before agreeing to a placement, and check whether it was written with input from the person themselves or their family. Ask how frequently plans are reviewed and who leads that review."}
Is this home caring?
{"found":"The caring domain was rated Good at the January 2022 inspection. No specific observations of staff interactions, quotes from residents or relatives, or examples of dignity and compassion in practice are included in the published report text. The Good rating tells us inspectors did not find concerns in this area and found sufficient evidence of positive practice, but the detail that families typically find most meaningful is not available in what has been published.","quotes":[],"family_meaning":"Staff warmth is the single biggest driver of family satisfaction in our review data, mentioned in 57.3% of positive reviews, and compassion and dignity follow closely at 55.2%. These are not abstract qualities: they show up in whether staff knock before entering a room, whether they use your parent's preferred name, and whether interactions feel unhurried. The inspection confirmed a Good rating here, but without published observations or quotes you cannot rely on the report alone. Your own visit, at an unannounced time if possible, is the most reliable way to assess this.","evidence_base":"Good Practice research emphasises that non-verbal communication matters as much as verbal interaction for people living with dementia. Staff who move without hurry, maintain eye contact, and respond to distress with calm presence produce measurably better wellbeing outcomes.","watch_out":"During your visit, stand quietly in a communal area for ten minutes and watch how staff move around the room. Are interactions unhurried? Do staff sit down to speak with residents rather than talking over them? Do they use names, and if so, are they the names residents actually prefer?"}
Is the home responsive?
{"found":"The responsive domain was rated Good at the January 2022 inspection. The published text does not include detail about the activities programme, one-to-one engagement for people who cannot join group activities, how individual preferences are recorded and acted on, or how end-of-life planning is approached. For a home supporting people with dementia and mental health conditions, responsiveness to individual need is particularly important, since these groups are most at risk of spending long periods without meaningful engagement.","quotes":[],"family_meaning":"Activities and engagement appear in 21.4% of positive family reviews, and resident happiness in 27.1%. For someone with advanced dementia, group activities may not be accessible, and Good Practice research consistently identifies one-to-one, tailored engagement as the most important factor in quality of life for this group. The inspection does not tell us whether Peaker Park has a dedicated activities coordinator, what the weekly programme looks like, or how staff support people who cannot participate in groups. These are questions worth asking in detail before a placement decision.","evidence_base":"The Good Practice evidence base identifies tailored individual activities, including familiar household tasks and Montessori-based approaches, as significantly more effective for people with moderate to advanced dementia than group-only programmes.","watch_out":"Ask the home to show you the activities schedule for the past two weeks, not a planned template. Ask specifically what happens for residents who cannot join group sessions, and who is responsible for one-to-one engagement on days when the activities coordinator is not on shift."}
Is the home well-led?
{"found":"The well-led domain was rated Good at the January 2022 inspection, and a review in July 2023 found no evidence requiring a change to this rating. The home has a named registered manager, Mrs Alison Anne Hartley, and a nominated individual, Mrs Diane Smith. Prime Life Limited is the operating organisation. No specific detail about management visibility, staff culture, governance processes, or how the home learns from incidents is included in the published report text. The improvement from a previous Requires Improvement rating across the whole home suggests leadership changes have had a positive effect, though the detail of what changed is not described.","quotes":[],"family_meaning":"Management stability is one of the strongest predictors of care quality over time, according to Good Practice research. The fact that the home improved from Requires Improvement to Good is a meaningful signal, but it also means you should ask what was wrong before and how it was fixed. Family communication is mentioned in 11.5% of positive reviews, and a well-led home should have a clear process for keeping you informed, not just when something goes wrong. Ask how often you would receive updates, and who your named point of contact would be.","evidence_base":"The Good Practice evidence base finds that leadership stability and a culture where staff can raise concerns without fear are the two factors most strongly associated with sustained quality improvement in care homes that have previously received lower ratings.","watch_out":"Ask the registered manager how long she has been in post, and ask what specifically changed between the Requires Improvement rating and the Good rating. A manager who can answer this clearly and without defensiveness is a good sign. Also ask how the home communicates with families when something goes wrong."}
Source: CQC inspection report →
What the evidence base says
Against the DCC Good Practice in Dementia Care standards, this home’s evidence aligns most strongly on The home supports people living with dementia, mental health conditions, physical disabilities and sensory impairments. They care for adults both under and over 65, bringing together different specialisms under one roof.. Gaps or open questions remain on Staff show real understanding of how dementia affects each person differently. They work out individual preferences and routines, helping residents stay connected to activities they enjoy while respecting when someone needs space and quiet. — areas worth probing directly during a visit.
The DCC Verdict
Our editorial view, built from the three lenses: what families tell us, what inspectors record, and how the home sits against good dementia-care practice.
DCC Family Score
Peaker Park Care Village received a Good rating across all five domains at its January 2022 inspection, representing a meaningful improvement from a previous Requires Improvement rating. However, the published report contains very limited specific detail, so most scores sit in the mid-range where positive evidence exists but lacks the depth of direct observation or testimony needed to score higher.
Homes in East Midlands typically score 68–82.The three-lens summary
What families tell us
Families describe how staff help new residents settle surprisingly quickly, especially those arriving from difficult hospital stays or unsuitable previous care settings. The teams adapt thoughtfully to each person's preferences — whether that means encouraging someone to join activities or respecting their wish for quiet time in their room. What stands out is how staff check on residents who prefer their own company, making sure they're comfortable without being intrusive.
What inspectors have recorded
Communication with families happens promptly when health changes occur, with staff providing detailed updates that help relatives understand what's happening. Care teams show particular skill during end-of-life care, supporting families with practical kindness while ensuring residents receive dignified, attentive care. Some families have noted concerns about staff turnover and occasional lapses in sensitivity during highly emotional moments, particularly at reception.
How it sits against good practice
For families navigating dementia or facing end-of-life care, finding somewhere with genuine expertise in these profound moments matters deeply.
Worth a visit
Peaker Park Care Village, a large 137-bed nursing home in Market Harborough run by Prime Life Limited, was rated Good across all five inspection domains at its most recent published inspection in January 2022. This is a significant improvement on a previous Requires Improvement rating, and a July 2023 review of available data found no evidence requiring a change to that rating. The home covers a wide range of needs including dementia, mental health conditions, physical disabilities, and sensory impairment, which makes it one of the more complex care environments inspectors assess. The main limitation of this report is the level of published detail. The inspection text does not include specific observations, resident or family quotes, or domain-by-domain narrative that would allow a thorough family analysis. Before you visit, prepare a detailed list of questions. The improvement from Requires Improvement is a positive signal, but with a home of this size and complexity, you will want to understand exactly what changed, and whether those improvements have held.
The three questions to ask when you visitSave this home. Compare it against your shortlist.
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In Their Own Words
How Peaker Park Care Village describes itself — collected from its own website. DCC has not edited or independently verified the content in this tab.
Where difficult journeys find gentle understanding and skilled support
Dedicated nursing home Support in Market Harborough
When families face the hardest transitions — whether it's dementia changing someone they love or knowing time is becoming precious — they need somewhere that truly understands. Peaker Park Care Village in Market Harborough brings together specialist skills with genuine compassion, particularly during life's most challenging moments. The care teams here show real strength in supporting both residents and their families through difficult times.
Who they care for
The home supports people living with dementia, mental health conditions, physical disabilities and sensory impairments. They care for adults both under and over 65, bringing together different specialisms under one roof.
Staff show real understanding of how dementia affects each person differently. They work out individual preferences and routines, helping residents stay connected to activities they enjoy while respecting when someone needs space and quiet.
Management & ethos
Communication with families happens promptly when health changes occur, with staff providing detailed updates that help relatives understand what's happening. Care teams show particular skill during end-of-life care, supporting families with practical kindness while ensuring residents receive dignified, attentive care. Some families have noted concerns about staff turnover and occasional lapses in sensitivity during highly emotional moments, particularly at reception.
The home & environment
The home maintains high standards of cleanliness throughout, with families consistently noting how well-kept everything is. Outdoor spaces give residents and visitors places to enjoy fresh air together. The different units each have their own character while maintaining the same attention to cleanliness and comfort that families appreciate.
“For families navigating dementia or facing end-of-life care, finding somewhere with genuine expertise in these profound moments matters deeply.”
DCC does not edit or curate content in this tab. For independently curated information, see The Evidence and DCC Verdict.













