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Wednesday, 20 May 2015

Ken's Story



My name is Ken Miles.  I’m 69 years old and have been retired for 5 years.  For the last 4 ½ years I have been a volunteer at the Hospice in the Weald.

I first became aware of the work at the Hospice when a friend of mine was admitted to the InPatient Unit for the last few weeks of his life.  I determined then, after seeing the work and caring from the Hospice staff, that when I retired I would in some small way give my time to help out. 

I regularly work on a Wednesday and divide my time between driving patients to and from the Hospice Day Service (in the minibus) and being a general Hospice Day Service Volunteer.  I help to serve the patients lunches and make them drinks and generally chat with them throughout their day.  It is the one time of the week when I can totally forget about myself and concentrate on others. 

I have always found the staff really caring towards the patients and the atmosphere has always been really positive.  It is a joy to come to work!  So if you would like to volunteer at the Hospice in the Weald in any capacity then please click here to see all our volunteer roles you can help with!


Ken

Thursday, 14 May 2015

12th May - International Nurses Day

Our Thank you wall was well under way for Nurses Day yesterday and we read some of them out as part of the celebrations, as well as tea and cake!  We had complimentary therapy treatments for the nursing staff during the day, which they all thoroughly enjoyed.  Liza, our chaplain, held meditation sessions for relaxation throughout the day and did I mention, we had cake............?

Peter Ellis our Nursing Director read out the following story from a relative of a patient who died here at the Hospice in the Weald only last week.


A week in the life of a family
Today is the day my father died at 10:20 am, at Hospice in the Weald, Kent.  His death was final, brutal and shocking.  What else can death be but final, brutal and shocking you might ask?  The answer has to be more brutal and more shocking, were it not for the services of hospice. 

My father had lung cancer, vascular disease and heart failure.  He was admitted to hospice a week ago having been visited at home on a regular basis by the hospice care in the community team up until then. 

Kerry, his named hospice care in the community nurse, was a Godsend both to him and to the family.  She met with us and him on a regular basis and was able to openly discuss the many difficult decisions facing my dad and our family in a comforting and kind way.  She arranged visits from the hospice Chaplain, Liza; the district nurses, the hospice counsellor and the doctors and was on hand with advice, care and support whenever my father or the family needed her.

Before he died my father fell, on three different occasions.  The last fall was the worst.  He never regained his strength after it.  It resulted in a hospital stay and discharge home.  This meant carers four times a day, the delivery to his home of hospital equipment and a hospital bed.  It also meant a rapid decline in his health and a very distressing time for all.  It was Kerry who assessed the situation and advised admission to hospice for palliative care and death with dignity. 

The nurses and doctors at Hospice in the Weald provided our family with a lifeline for which we will always be grateful.  By admitting my dad to hospice we could simply be a family again.  Gone was the responsibility of letting carers in, sitting with him until the carers came back, worrying that he wasn’t getting appropriate care, worrying that he might be in pain and that we mightn’t be able to manage it.  The team at Pembury took on all of my father’s needs with compassion, respect and professionalism and allowed him to be the dignified man he had been all his life.  Whilst he was able his humour and wit had a chance to shine through and when that time was past he was made comfortable in a lovely room with views over the beautifully tended hospice grounds. 

Throughout his stay in hospice my brother and sister, my aunt and I were treated with great kindness and understanding.  No request was too much bother, no time of day or night was inconvenient for the staff and everything was done to meet our needs as well as our father’s.  From the big things like meeting with Liza the hospice chaplain, holding meetings with the doctors and nurses, and being offered counselling as part of the hospice outreach to the little things like hot cups of tea and toast with jam we were held in kind hands. We sat with my dad throughout his hospice stay and were grateful that he did not have to walk his final path alone. Hospice allowed us to be a family from the day my dad was wheeled in until the day we walked out without him. 

To every stakeholder who makes hospice possible – the volunteers, the cleaners, the gardeners, the chaplains, the nurses, the doctors, the counsellors, the flower arrangers, the front desk ladies and those behind the scenes – thank you.  Until you have walked the road of a hospice user it may be hard to fully understand the impact you have had but from one grateful family be assured – my father’s end of life and death were made better by you. 


With gratitude


Friday, 8 May 2015

The Hospice Community Choir

The Community Choir was the brain child of Kylie Ferris the Music Therapist at the Hospice in the Weald.  For the taster session on Tuesday 21 May 2013 60 enthusiastic people bowled along to see what it was all about.  The idea was not just to benefit the patients, but their families and carers, staff volunteers and anyone in the community who wanted to sing. 
After the first taster session 40 people signed up to join the choir and from the first rehearsal on 4 June the choir produced a really great sound.

Our first Christmas we sung with the Salvation Army at the “Light up a Life” service.

The following spring we performed in our first concert “Spring Serenade”.  We took part in the “Summer Service of Celebration and Thanksgiving” for the Hospice at St. Peter’s Upper Church in Pembury and used the same venue for an autumnal music and magic show “November Notes”.  We attended the “Light up a Life” service again and also went carol singing with our money buckets in the Victoria Centre at Tunbridge Wells.

We grow and mature each year and we are getting more adventurous too!

It is never too late and everyone is welcome.  Come and join us and share in the joy of singing.  We donate £5 per person every rehearsal to cover our costs and to go towards fundraising for the Hospice.

Come on, contact us, we are just waiting to hear from you.