In a perfect world you'd have swing free closers throughout, but in the lower budget end of the care market with older buildings it's not uncommon to see them as an achievable alternative in place of the existing situation of the doors having a standard closer/no closer/always wedged.
I've one older home where the cross corridor, compartment and stair head doors were direct magnetic hold opens, but the rooms were DorGards.
The benchmark guidance says that indirect devices should only be used if the FRA can justify it and that they shouldn't be used for single stairway or critical MoE uses. In my example, taking all factors into account I said the dorgards were OK in the immediate term but that they should aspire to gradually upgrade to direct category swing free closers. As well as the fire safety issues many residents like the doors open a little bit rather than all or nothing.