Thursday 18 December 2008

Silent night .........


The Joseph Rowntree Foundation published a report in April, 08 Supporting older people in care homes at night by Kerr, D., Wilkinson, H., and Cunningham, C. (www.jrf.org.uk/knowledge/findings/socialcare/2201.asp ) It certainly made us at Parkhaven reflect on our practice.

Some of the key findings from this study of night time experiences of residents and staff in 3 care homes in Scotland were: managers were insufficiently involved in night-time supervision and practice, night staff often felt undervalued and isolated from the running of the home, night staff received less training than day staff, and the training was not specifically focussed on night time issues. There was a dependence on unfamiliar agency and bank staff which increased the workload on regular staff and compromised the quality of care for residents. Staff carried out routine and indiscriminate ‘checking’ throughout the night. The report also observed the unacceptable levels of noise and light during the night which affected the residents sleep and caused agitation. It was also concluded that the night time physical environment was disabling particularly for people with dementia. However, it was encouraging and motivating to read that the study showed that even minor changes in practice could result in improvements to the experience of residents at night.

So what are we going to do? The report was considered by our managers. They will now review their practice at night and consider the issues and how they relate to their own homes. This is a very important report because residential homes are a 24 hour service but the focus is more often on the day time experience. We are determined that ours should truly be an excellent 24 hour service. We will look at each of the aspects highlighted and agree what needs to be done including reducing the light and noise levels in an endeavour to give residents a silent night and an improved sleep which may then result in an improved day.


Hilary Rowland

18.12.08

Thursday 27 November 2008

Hiding behind the credit crunch

There is no doubt that these are difficult and potentially bleak economic times but we should be cautious that the ‘ credit crunch’, now a somewhat overused phrase, is not used as a reason for sloppy management or poorly thought through decision making. It would be very easy to hide behind the ‘credit crunch’ as a reason for not doing something when in essence it may not have been fully thought through in the first place. Or people may short cut the decision making process and instead of putting effort in to thinking rigorously about a particular situation and come to a rational and well considered view with well articulated reasons for a particular decision, the glib response, it’s the ‘credit crunch’.

Nor is everything all doom laden. In fact at Parkhaven we have taken two very positive steps this month. Firstly all staff were awarded a bonus to be paid in their Christmas wages to thank them for what they have done and to try and offset some of the financial pressure and constraint that some staff may be feeling at this time. This is a small recognition for all that staff have done over the first 6 months of the year, which for the Trust showed some excellent indicators. Our services continue to be in considerable demand, we are seeing more people than we have done in decades and our services are increasingly flexible and innovative. Our staff relish their training and sickness is down. It is difficult to measure the success of services such as ours but underpinning all of what we are doing should be the importance of treating all the people who use our services with the utmost dignity and respect. This does mean having a real attention to detail about what matters to a particular individual. It can often be the small things that can make a real difference.

This month we have also embarked on planting a new wood for our local community. 1600 trees (native species) are being planted over two weekends with the help of the British Trust for conservation volunteers and a grant from the English Woodland Trust. Another reason to be optimistic.

So we should not let our heads drop at this time but instead we should celebrate what is good and value what we have rather than what we have not.

Hilary Rowland

26.11.08

Tuesday 21 October 2008



A Sisyphean task

It is that time of year when the gardeners begin the Sisyphean task of sweeping up the leaves. It is said that this year is going to be an excellent autumnal display – ‘living art’ was how one gardener described it as. Parkhaven is lucky that it does have the immense gift of land (last month’s blog related how we use that land for therapeutic purposes).

But as well as the Sisyphean task of sweeping up the leaves, there is another uphill struggle and that is the debate and open discussion that there needs to be about dementia. Terry Pratchett, author, who was recently diagnosed with dementia is certainly doing an excellent job to raise the profile of this very debilitating disease. He wrote on the day of the launch of the Alzheimers’s Society report Dementia: out of the shadows a letter to the Times (7.10.08) in which he argues for an end to the stigma and misunderstanding that surround this disease. The first step he writes is ‘to talk openly about dementia because it’s a fact well enshrined in folklore, that if we are to kill the demon then first we have to say its name’. We are trying to do this at our Trust.

Currently the Trust is supporting hundreds of people with dementia. We have an extensive menu of services to support people. We have separate day services for older and young people with dementia which offer space and grounds to walk, gardening, yoga and music sessions and lunches out. There is choice and hopefully something for everyone including carers. Note books go back and forth so there is communication between relatives and the Centre and a monthly newsletter. Next month we start on a new venture: a weekend away for four of our service users, an opportunity for a holiday. There are also opportunities for short breaks in our newly refurbished home or a permanent placement. As well as speaking its name, those with dementia and their carers need excellent services and support. The Trust is endeavouring to do its bit.

We hope to give people hope and laughter and will certainly be playing our part ‘to bring dementia out of the shadows’ to kill the demon.

Hilary Rowland

Tuesday 30 September 2008


Gardening at Parkhaven, for people with dementia

Despite the credit crunch and the depressing news that is hitting us daily, there is good news. Recently the Trust was awarded a grant to help people keep gardening.

Three days a week, Parkhaven’s gardeners Keren and Richard work with service users in the gardens around the Willow Day Centre and at The Haven, our plot a hundred yards away, where there are nice greenhouses, raised beds, an orchard, doves, chickens and geese. We sow seeds, take cuttings, pot on, plant up our beds, fill hanging baskets, pick flowers and vegetables, feed the chickens. Come and look round!

Gardening can really help people with dementia: it keeps you fit, it’s good to be outside, contact with nature and the seasons inspires hope, and the planning and sequencing skills involved in gardening seem to be particularly effective in preserving mental agility. The grand name for this is ‘horticultural therapy’.

We have recently been awarded a grant of £95,000 from the Henry Smith Charity to develop the work we do at The Willow, so that anyone with dementia living in the community can garden for a few hours with us at Parkhaven. Carers can come too, or might enjoy a well-earned break instead.

We will also be helping people with dementia look after their own gardens: they get some exercise (but we do the heavy work), they feel good about their garden, they get some company. We hope it might help some people with dementia stay in their homes for longer. We’re not doing people’s gardens for them, we’re gardening with them.

We’re calling the project ‘Keep gardening’. We will shortly be appointing a new gardener James, who’ll soon be out and about in gardens in the local community with the Parkhaven trailer. The grant allows us to offer a free service for two years.

If you know someone who might be interested in any of these activities, as a service user or as a volunteer, contact a member of the Willow staff or Richard on 0151-527 3667 or richard.ayres@parkhaven.org.uk.

So keep gardening, it can make you feel good.

















Thursday 21 August 2008

The Parkhaven Blog:

Changing times

This is the first blog for Parkhaven Trust. It is our intention that this will be updated monthly initially. Those reading the blog are probably clear what it is but many like my Dad, still ask what a blog is. The best description I have read is that it is an online journal. And that is just what Parkhaven’s blog will endeavour to be: a journal about events and an exploration of issues that are relevant to Parkhaven Trust and those that use our services.

For this first blog I thought it would be worth retelling the story of Parkhaven. Parkhaven Trust was established in 1888 as the Maghull Homes for Epileptics. It was set up for people with epilepsy. There used to be a farm, workshops and a school. Over the years the needs of people with epilepsy have changed dramatically with the improvements of medication and there is no longer the need for specific residential accommodation for people with epilepsy.

Thus the charity has transformed its services and it continues to change them to respond to the changing expectations and needs. Now Parkhaven is responsible for running a nursing home, a residential home for older people and a specialist home for people with dementia. The Trust has recently spent £2m on refurbishing and extending this home and using all the best evidence about how to design the home to make service users as independent as possible. Colour coding has been used and those moving back into the home were able to choose their colours. Pink was the most popular!

In addition to the residential care we now provide a thriving day service for people with dementia. People who attend the day service have the opportunity of gardening, doing yoga, singing, dancing and meals out. It is a place where there is laughter and enjoyment. There is no doubt that dementia is on the agenda as demonstrated by the recent publication of the new dementia strategy which the Department of Health is consulting on http://www.dh.gov.uk/

Our forefathers left us the immense gift of land, it is our responsibility to nurture and protect it and use it for those that now need it. Over the past four years we have had to get the Trust back on track financially. This we have done by concentrating on those that use our services and being very clear and focused about where we should be heading. I suspect many of us have been in awe of the excellent results of the GB cycling team at the Beijing Olympics. Their performance director puts this down not to one particular thing but ‘the aggregation of marginal gains’. I think we can all learn from this – it is about taking an interest and improving on everything. This is what we are endeavouring to do here.

Hilary Rowland Chief Executive Parkhaven Trust