Major boost for Wyong palliative care unit

From left: Elsie’s Project volunteers Melissa Jones and Caroline Cruise, Member for Terrigal Adam Crouch, Home Instead Central Coast and Newcastle business operations manager Amee Dawson, Mary Ann Vale, Elsie’s Project organising committee chair Margaret Pearce and Home Instead Central Coast and Newcastle community engagement manager Samantha Farham

A $10,000 donation from in-home care provider Home Instead will help to create a sanctuary of serenity for terminally ill patients at Wyong Hospital.

This July, work is scheduled to begin on a new 12-bed palliative care unit, which will be called Elsie’s Project and be modelled on a similar facility which opened at Gosford Hospital in 2020.

Catering for people aged 18-plus, and incorporating family accommodation, it will increase the number of palliative care beds on the Central Coast to 24.

Its features will include a beautiful courtyard garden, complete with a water feature, which will be funded by the donation.

It will feature a brass plaque dedicated to Home Instead’s clients.

To mark the start of Palliative Care Week, Home Instead Central Coast and Newcastle representatives handed over the $10,000 on Monday, May 22, to the Elsie’s Project organising committee.

Special guest was Mary Ann Vale, whose father Peter – a long-time Home Instead client alongside wife Judith – directly sparked the generous donation.

“My father battled cancer for about 10 years, and towards the end, he was in Gosford Hospital,” Vale said.

“He was then transferred to Elsie’s Project for the last few days of his life.

“When we had his funeral service, we asked those who attended to make a donation to Elsie’s Project, rather than giving flowers.

“A little while later I received a phone call from our Home Instead Client Care Manager – who had attended the funeral with some of Dad’s carers – letting us know they wanted to make the $10,000 donation in his memory, which I thought was really lovely.

“It is very, very generous of them, and very kind.”

Home Instead Central Coast and Newcastle business operations manager, Amee Dawson, highlighted the importance of the Wyong Elsie’s Project as the missing piece of the puzzle for local palliative care.

“At Home Instead, we offer palliative care services in-home, with a focus on maintaining dignity and quality of life for people in their final days, whether it’s helping an older gentleman with a daily shave or taking someone outside to enjoy a little sunshine,” she said.

“However, it’s not always possible for people to stay in their home, which is why it’s so important for them to have somewhere like Elsie’s Project – somewhere that echoes our focus on personalised care to give people dignity and quality of life as their time draws to a close.”

That commitment to people and personality is something Mary Ann Vale has firsthand experience of.

“When my dad was moved from the actual hospital into palliative care, it was Melbourne Cup day,” she said.

“And he enjoyed his red wine and he always enjoyed the action of the race day.

“So we got permission from the doctors to give him a glass of red wine and watch the Cup, and he was actually carrying that glass of red wine as they transferred him into palliative care.

“He even won the little sweep we had between us, so he was very happy about that.”

Margaret Pearce, chair of the Elsie’s Project organising committing, welcomed the donation.

She said the project had only been able to get off the ground with the integral support of backers like Member for Terrigal Adam Crouch, who was also there on the day.

The idea for how to best use the $10,000 donation sprang from her vision of an accessible courtyard retreat steeped in beauty, peace and serenity.

“I asked Home Instead if they wanted to cover the water feature for the garden and was delighted when they said yes,” she said.

“It will be a beautiful feature and will be something everyone will be able to see and enjoy.”

It’s something of which Vale thinks her dad would have approved.

“He was very much a thinking sort of person,” she said.

“And I know he would have really enjoyed the idea of contemplation and the peacefulness of that environment.”

For more information on planning for end-of-life care at home, visit Home Instead’s information portal at homeinstead.com.au/resources/dying-at-home/.

Elsie’s Project is a major project of the Lions Club of Wyoming East Gosford Centennial.

Since it opened in 2020, more than 1,000 patients have used Elsie’s Project at Gosford.

It runs at 100 per cent capacity for its 12 palliative care beds and there is a permanent waiting list.

To date, more than 40 per cent of its clients have been from the northern end of the Coast.

It is envisaged the addition of the facility at Wyong will free-up beds at Gosford to accept more patients from the southern end of the Coast.

The project committee is also working to identify and fund 20 Registered Nurses who can undergo training – at a cost of $5,000 per person – to be ready to work at the Wyong facility when it opens.

Source:
Home Instead

1 Comment on "Major boost for Wyong palliative care unit"

  1. Christine | June 1, 2023 at 10:54 am |

    How wonderful, my elderly parents are with Home Instead & my daughter works for Home Instead. I never knew they provided home pallitive care, which is great, but now they’ll be at Wyong Hospital too. Thankyou to everyone involved.

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