Dementia Care Home

Highfield Care Home

9-11 Mandeville Road, Saffron Walden, Essex, CB11 4AQ

Nursing homes

At a Glance

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

DCC Family Score
74/ 100
Weighted from family reviews
Dementia SpecialismConfirmed

Nursing homes

Families Rate The Staff72 / 100

Staff warmth score

“Well Looked After”68%

of reviewers answered yes

Good to know

  • Registered beds60
  • SpecialismsCaring for adults over 65 yrs, Caring for adults under 65 yrs, Dementia, Physical disabilities, Sensory impairment
  • Last inspected2018-09-05

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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 describe walking into a genuinely friendly atmosphere where staff remember who you are and what matters to you. There's a warmth here that visitors notice straight away, from the care teams through to the office staff who help sort out the practical bits.

The eight family priority themes

  • Staff warmth72
  • Compassion & dignity72
  • Cleanliness70
  • Activities & engagement65
  • Food quality65
  • Healthcare70
  • Management & leadership72
  • Resident happiness68
Section 02

What inspectors found

Inspected 2018-09-05

  • Is this home safe?

    Not yet rated
    The home was rated Good for safety at the February 2024 inspection. This followed a previous period where safety concerns contributed to a Requires Improvement overall rating. The published report does not provide specific detail on what was found during the safety review, such as falls data, medicines management observations, or night staffing numbers. The home is a 60-bed nursing home, which means qualified nurses must be present, but shift ratios are not stated in the available findings.
    Verified by inspector
  • Is the care effective?

    Not yet rated
    The home was rated Good for effectiveness at the February 2024 inspection. The home is registered for nursing care and for people living with dementia, which requires specific training and care planning expertise. The published report does not detail the content of care plans, the frequency of GP visits, how medicines are managed, or what dementia-specific training staff have completed. Food quality and dietary management are not mentioned in the available findings.
    Verified by inspector
  • Is this home caring?

    Not yet rated
    The home was rated Good for caring at the February 2024 inspection. This domain covers how staff treat the people who live there: whether they are kind, unhurried, and respectful of dignity and privacy. The published report does not include inspector observations of staff interactions, resident or relative testimony, or examples of how dignity was upheld. A Good rating indicates inspectors were satisfied, but the specific evidence behind that judgement is not available in the published findings.
    Verified by inspectorResident testimony recorded
  • Is the home responsive?

    Not yet rated
    The home was rated Good for responsiveness at the February 2024 inspection. This domain covers whether the home tailors care to the individual: activities, engagement, respect for personal preferences, and end-of-life planning. The published report does not describe the activities programme, one-to-one engagement provision, or how the home supports people who can no longer join group activities. Complaints handling and end-of-life care are also not mentioned in the available findings.
    Verified by inspector
  • Is the home well-led?

    Not yet rated
    The home was rated Good for well-led at the February 2024 inspection, having previously been rated Requires Improvement overall. A registered manager, Mr Jandryle Umacob Trondillo, is named on the registration, and a nominated individual, Mr Aaron Matthew Barham, is recorded as the organisational lead. The published report does not detail how long the current manager has been in post, whether staff feel supported to raise concerns, or what governance systems are in place. The improvement from Requires Improvement to Good suggests meaningful leadership changes have occurred.
    Verified by inspector
  • Source: CQC inspection report →

    Section 03

    What the evidence base says

    Highfield supports younger adults as well as over-65s, including people living with dementia, physical disabilities and sensory impairments. For residents with dementia, that flexibility around personal care routines becomes even more important — staff understand when someone needs time and space rather than rushing them through daily tasks. 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.

74/ 100

DCC Family Score

Highfield Care Home scored 74 out of 100. The home improved from Requires Improvement to Good across all five inspection domains, which is a meaningful and positive step, but the published report contains limited specific detail, observations, or direct testimony to push scores higher with confidence.

Homes in East typically score 68–82.

The three-lens summary

Lens 01

What families tell us

Families describe walking into a genuinely friendly atmosphere where staff remember who you are and what matters to you. There's a warmth here that visitors notice straight away, from the care teams through to the office staff who help sort out the practical bits.

Lens 02

What inspectors have recorded

What stands out is how staff adapt to each person's preferences rather than sticking rigidly to routines. They keep families properly informed too — you'll get updates without having to chase, and when questions come up, the office team are quick to respond and sort things out.

Lens 03

How it sits against good practice

It's the kind of place where end-of-life care is handled with real grace, giving families the comfort they need during difficult times.

DCC Recommendation

Worth a visit

Highfield Care Home in Saffron Walden was rated Good at its most recent inspection on 13 February 2024, with Good ratings across all five domains: Safe, Effective, Caring, Responsive, and Well-led. This is a meaningful improvement from its previous Requires Improvement rating. The home cares for up to 60 people and holds a dementia specialism alongside registrations for nursing care, physical disabilities, and sensory impairments. A registered manager is named and in post. The main uncertainty here is that the published inspection report contains very little specific detail: no direct observations of staff behaviour, no resident or relative quotes, and no data on staffing ratios, activity provision, or food quality. A Good rating is encouraging and the improvement trend matters, but it tells you the floor has been raised, not how high the ceiling is. Before committing to this home, visit at a mealtime and an afternoon activity session, ask to see last week's actual staffing rota including night shifts, and speak directly to the registered manager about what specifically changed since the Requires Improvement rating.

The three questions to ask when you visit

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In Their Own Words

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

What Highfield Care Home says about itself

Where your timing matters more than theirs

Compassionate Care in Saffron Walden at Highfield Care Home

When families talk about Highfield Care Home in Saffron Walden, they keep coming back to how staff work around what residents want, not what's on the schedule. It's refreshing to hear about a place that gets the small stuff right — like letting someone have their morning wash when they're ready, not when the rota says so.

Care & specialisms

Who they care for

    Highfield supports younger adults as well as over-65s, including people living with dementia, physical disabilities and sensory impairments.

    How they describe their dementia care

    For residents with dementia, that flexibility around personal care routines becomes even more important — staff understand when someone needs time and space rather than rushing them through daily tasks.

    “It's the kind of place where end-of-life care is handled with real grace, giving families the comfort they need during difficult times.”

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

    Free download – Dementia Stage 4

    Not sure if it's dementia or just ageing? Here's the checklist your GP will use.

    Twelve signs to observe. A simple scoring framework. A printable, one-page record you can take to your next GP appointment, so you go in with specifics, not anxiety.

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    Related:

    What Real Families Say About Dementia Care Homes: The Eight Things That Matter Most

    A Which? Report for Care Homes: Real Family Reviews, Not Just Official Inspections

    Step-by-Step Guide to Finding a Care Home for Your Mum in the UK

    What Does 'Dementia Specialist' Actually Mean? How to Tell If a Care Home Really Is One

    Best UK Website for Comparing Dementia Care Homes (Beyond CQC Ratings)

    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.

    Comforting Memories

    Britain 1940 to 1970: Memory Lane

    Card Game

    The Card Game That Turns Familiar Phrases Into Open Doors

    Memory Box

    The Box That Holds a Life

    Digital Photoframe

    The Frame That Brings the Family Into the Room

    Digital Calendar

    The Clock That Knows What Day It Is

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