Dementia Care Home

Beechwood Lodge Care Home

Meadow View, Rochdale, Lancashire, OL12 7PB

Residential homes

At a Glance

The information you need to decide whether this home warrants a closer look.

DCC Family Score
72/ 100
Weighted from family reviews
Dementia SpecialismConfirmed

Residential homes

Families Rate The Staff70 / 100

Staff warmth score

“Well Looked After”68%

of reviewers answered yes

Good to know

  • Registered beds66
  • SpecialismsCaring for adults over 65 yrs, Dementia
  • Last inspected2022-12-09

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The Evidence

What the review data, the inspection reports, and the dementia-care evidence base tell us about this home.

Section 01

What families say

Families talk about staff who are genuinely caring and considerate, taking time to know each resident as an individual. People describe feeling accepted and integrated when they visit, with one family member becoming such a regular presence they felt like part of the furniture. The atmosphere here seems to put both residents and their loved ones at ease.

The eight family priority themes

  • Staff warmth70
  • Compassion & dignity70
  • Cleanliness70
  • Activities & engagement65
  • Food quality65
  • Healthcare68
  • Management & leadership72
  • Resident happiness68
Section 02

What inspectors found

Inspected 2022-12-09

  • Is this home safe?

    Not yet rated
    The inspection rated the safe domain as Good at the assessment on 6 October 2025. This domain covers staffing levels, medicines management, safeguarding, infection control, and how the home learns from incidents. The full domain report text is not yet available, so it is not possible to confirm what specific evidence inspectors found to support this rating. The previous Requires Improvement rating would have included safety concerns, so this improvement is worth exploring with the manager.
    Verified by inspector
  • Is the care effective?

    Not yet rated
    The inspection rated the effective domain as Good at the assessment on 6 October 2025. This domain covers training, care planning, healthcare access, nutrition, and how well the home meets individual needs. The full domain report text is not yet published, so specific findings about dementia training content, care plan quality, or GP access are not available. The improvement from Requires Improvement suggests earlier shortfalls in this area have been addressed.
    Verified by inspector
  • Is this home caring?

    Not yet rated
    The inspection rated the caring domain as Good at the assessment on 6 October 2025. This domain covers staff warmth, dignity, respect, privacy, and whether people are supported to maintain their independence. No specific inspector observations or resident and family testimony are available in the published summary. Staff warmth is the strongest driver of family satisfaction in our review data, so this is an area where a visit will tell you far more than a published rating.
    Verified by inspectorResident testimony recorded
  • Is the home responsive?

    Not yet rated
    The inspection rated the responsive domain as Good at the assessment on 6 October 2025. This domain covers whether care is tailored to individual needs, whether activities are meaningful and varied, how complaints are handled, and whether end-of-life care is well planned. No specific detail about the activity programme, individual engagement, or complaint handling is available in the published summary.
    Verified by inspector
  • Is the home well-led?

    Not yet rated
    The inspection rated the well-led domain as Good at the assessment on 6 October 2025. Kelly Shirley Brown is named as Registered Manager and Mr Richard Odell as Nominated Individual, indicating a defined and accountable leadership structure. The move from Requires Improvement to Good across all domains suggests the management team has made substantive changes since the previous inspection. No specific detail about governance processes, staff culture, or complaint handling is available in the published summary.
    Verified by inspector
  • Source: CQC inspection report →

    Section 03

    What the evidence base says

    Beechwood Lodge cares for people over 65, with particular experience in dementia support. While the home lists dementia as a key specialism, families haven't shared specific details about the approaches used. This is something worth asking about when you visit, especially around daily activities and how staff help residents stay engaged. All 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.

72/ 100

DCC Family Score

Beechwood Lodge has moved from Requires Improvement to a Good rating across all five inspection domains, which is a meaningful and encouraging step forward. However, because the individual domain reports have not yet been published in full, most scores reflect the positive direction of travel rather than specific verified evidence.

Homes in North West typically score 68–82.

The three-lens summary

Lens 01

What families tell us

Families talk about staff who are genuinely caring and considerate, taking time to know each resident as an individual. People describe feeling accepted and integrated when they visit, with one family member becoming such a regular presence they felt like part of the furniture. The atmosphere here seems to put both residents and their loved ones at ease.

Lens 02

What inspectors have recorded

The home appears well-organised and runs smoothly day to day. Staff show particular skill in supporting families through difficult times — one family shared how thoughtfully the team handled end-of-life care, keeping them involved and informed throughout while ensuring their relative was comfortable and respected.

Lens 03

How it sits against good practice

Sometimes the smallest details — how staff greet you, whether they remember what matters to your family — tell you everything about a place.

DCC Recommendation

Worth a visit

Beechwood Lodge in Rochdale was rated Good across all five inspection domains at its assessment on 6 October 2025, with findings published on 2 December 2025. This is a significant improvement on the home's previous Requires Improvement rating, and it covers safety, effectiveness, caring, responsiveness, and leadership. The home specialises in dementia care and residential care for adults over 65, with 66 beds, and is run by Finbrook Limited with a named registered manager in post. The honest limitation of this report is that the full domain inspection text has not yet been made available in the published summary, so it is not possible to confirm specific observations about staff warmth, food quality, activity provision, night staffing, or dementia-specialist practice. A Good rating is genuinely encouraging, particularly given the improvement from Requires Improvement, but a rating alone does not tell you what your parent's daily life will look like. Visit in person, ask to see the staffing rota from last week, observe how staff speak to residents in corridors, and ask the registered manager directly what the inspectors identified as areas still needing attention.

The three questions to ask when you visit

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In Their Own Words

How Beechwood Lodge Care Home describes itself — collected from its own website. DCC has not edited or independently verified the content in this tab.

What Beechwood Lodge Care Home says about itself

Where caring staff make families feel genuinely welcome every day

Compassionate Care in Rochdale at Beechwood Lodge

When you're searching for the right care, you want somewhere that treats your loved one with real warmth and consideration. Beechwood Lodge in Rochdale brings together experienced staff who understand what matters most — making sure residents feel comfortable and families feel part of daily life. The home specialises in supporting people over 65, including those living with dementia.

Care & specialisms

Who they care for

    Beechwood Lodge cares for people over 65, with particular experience in dementia support.

    How they describe their dementia care

    While the home lists dementia as a key specialism, families haven't shared specific details about the approaches used. This is something worth asking about when you visit, especially around daily activities and how staff help residents stay engaged.

    “Sometimes the smallest details — how staff greet you, whether they remember what matters to your family — tell you everything about a place.”

    DCC does not edit or curate content in this tab. For independently curated information, see The Evidence and DCC Verdict.

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    Related:

    The 8 Things Real Families Say About Dementia Care Homes

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    Steps to take to Find a Care Home for Your Mum in the UK

    What Does 'Dementia Specialist' Mean?

    Best UK Website for Comparing Dementia Care Homes

    Dementia care gifts that help

    The Thoughtful Gift That Makes a Difficult Day Easier

    The things that make the greatest difference to someone living with dementia are rarely the most obvious ones. They are the things that ease the day — that give a carer a moment to breathe, or give the person they care for a moment of calm or quiet joy. Every item here was chosen because it works, and because it reduces stress for everyone in the room.

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    Card Game

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    Memory Box

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    Digital Photoframe

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    Digital Calendar

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