A Total Health Ecosystem

One of my best reads this year on health and wellbeing has been Sally Davies and Jonathan Pearson- Stuttard’s book, Whose Health is it Anyway, published in November. It sets out a total health ecosystem where local government, business, the Private Sector, and social and commercial drivers invest in health, prevention etc.,

Read more

The power of a smile

The power of the smile is known and experienced by us all, particularly important for those living with dementia. I found in visiting my mother for many years across different care homes I visited as both a professional and a relative non verbal communication and human connection without words are part of the poetry and pain of dementia.

Read more

Memorable Moments- the world of touch and dementia

I remember a time when I visited a care home and I caught the eye and smiled at a lady who was walking towards me down a corridor, momentarily lost in her own world. She looked up and came up very close, cupped my face and stroked it in gentle caresses. She had no words. I had never met her, but her soft nurturing touch was powerful, and I shall never forget it as a response to warm engagement.

Read more

The missing Sense- Relationship centred touch

We have heard a lot about the sense of touch recently on the radio. Touch ‘hunger’ has been proposed as a syndrome that people feel when they have been deprived of sufficient human touch.
For those in care, the functional touch to assist in every day activity is still experienced but other forms of touch are less likely as we have become ‘touch sensitive’ with physical distancing required of this Covid virus control.

Read more

Care home visits – no man is an island

Since the beginning of time, whatever your beliefs the human condition is programmed to form meaningful relationships with others. These can take different forms. We know that we are valuable human beings throughout the life course, from cradle to grave. Sadly, our society and how it is structured tends to still be ageist although we have added years to life through good public health over the years, for us to enjoy. - Read more……

Read more

An Equal Playing Field

In my professional life working in many different care homes, I have been saddened by the lack of understanding about the increasing need for a higher set of gerontology skills and lack of recognition of the need for dedicated specialist generalists in the care of older people. Care homes are dealing with people with the most complex conditions and probably is the only sector that is managing long term conditions on a daily basis. This is unlike the NHS who is set up to treat acute episodes of illness. - read more….

Read more

I am home when I am with you

Making relatives feel at home is an essential ingredient for a good care home. This has not changed over time. It is about feeling welcome and having a good visiting experience, knowing who is who, having timely information and being involved in the care to the extent that worked for my mother, being able to raise concerns without fear of retribution and feeling part of the community of the home.

Read more

The Great Escape

It was a very strange feeling leaving the UK via Gatwick which was completely desolate with very few people and services operating. It seemed rather like a ghost town in North terminal. It felt as if we were escaping the ‘new normal’.

Read more

Care Home Lives Matter : The Dilemma Care Homes Face 

Keeping up with the advice changes, feeling unprotected without equipment and living with high levels of risk has made care homes vulnerable and exposed. Being without the NHS ‘ring of immunity’ with promised funding bound by complexity has added to stress. Money furred up in arteries of bureaucracy in local government created delays or not reaching care homes at all in some cases when speed was of the essence for infection control.

Read more

Compassionate society behaviours to keep and others to dump- Reflections

Kindness can transform someone’s dark moments like a blaze of light. As we come out the other side of this, the likelihood is one that we will see an increase in mental health challenges and a deeper awareness of the importance of keeping well and the whole aspect of prevention and we could do well to challenge the toxic aspects of living which has affected our health and wellbeing. We need to ask searching questions about our lifestyle and how it impacts our health and realise that our attitudes and our ‘arteries’; everything is connected.

Read more