Caregiver with patient

Post-Surgery Recovery Care in Garden City

Post-Surgery Recovery Care. Nurse-led. Doctor-supported.

The first days and weeks after surgery are when patients are most vulnerable to complications — surgical site infections, blood clots, and sudden mobility loss. Being discharged home shouldn't mean being left alone to manage wound care and medications without support. Our nurse-led team ensures a smooth, safe transition from hospital to home with hands-on clinical care from day one.

Local to Garden City: Planned 1960s north Winnipeg subdivision centred on Garden City Shopping Centre, known for curved streets and single-family bungalows. Nearest hospital: Seven Oaks General Hospital.

What's Included

Skilled Nursing: Wound care, drain management, medication administration, vital monitoring
Personal Care: Bathing, dressing, grooming, toileting during limited mobility
Mobility Support: Safe transfers, walking assistance, therapy exercise reinforcement
Domestic Help: Light meal preparation, household tasks during recovery period
Care Coordination: Surgeon follow-up scheduling, therapy appointments, family updates

What Your Family Gains

Infection caught early

Daily wound inspection by trained nurses catches redness, drainage, or dehiscence before it becomes an ER visit.

Clots prevented

Anticoagulant schedules followed and early mobility progression reduces DVT and PE risk.

Pain managed

Complex pain regimens (multi-modal, sometimes with narcotic tapering) handled by RNs, not guessed at by family.

Full recovery on time

Therapy exercises actually done, follow-ups attended, discharge instructions followed.

Serving Garden City, Winnipeg

Nearest hospital

Seven Oaks General Hospital (~2 min, adjacent)

Care facilities nearby

Seven Oaks General Hospital (transitional care) · Kiwanis Chateau · Fred Douglas Place

Area character

Planned 1960s north Winnipeg subdivision centred on Garden City Shopping Centre, known for curved streets and single-family bungalows.

Who lives here

Original 1960s homeowners now in their 70s–80s; steady long-term care demand.

Common Questions