At St Luke’s we appreciate our wonderful staff and volunteers every single day of the year, and always aim to support their health and wellbeing.
But this Christmas we thought they deserved a very special thank you on behalf of all the patients and families who have benefited from their compassionate care and hard work in 2023.
Our CEO George Lillie and his senior management colleagues Sue Cannon, Mike Dukes, Adrienne Murphy and Tricia Davis have been out and about delivering personal gifts for each member of our superb team.
A bright and colourful Christmas card, designed and generously shared by our patron Brian Pollard, showing a wintry Plymouth Hoe full of ice skaters, was first out of the bag. Nestled in the envelope was one of our unique Christmas robin pin badges, bringing the good cheer and spirit of remembrance these hardy little birds represent.
The icing on the cake was a colourful bespoke gift pack containing three different flavours of fudge, lovingly handmade by the Devon Fudge Company. Chief executive George even popped into the company’s Plymouth kitchen to give the copper pot a festive stir.
Our healthcare assistants, nurses and doctors are, of course, the incredible individuals on the vital frontline delivering specialist care to patients and families, but we never forget there’s also an army of special people behind them who make it possible for our services to keep running.
Our retail teams, receptionists, patient and family support team, fundraising and event organisers, maintenance workers, finance wizards, educators, cooks and domestics, and many more, all make an essential contribution that deserves to be celebrated.
After stopping by our shops on Plymouth’s Barbican to deliver gifts, George said: “It’s really nice for me to get out and meet the shop staff and volunteers, and it’s important for them to be recognised for all the fantastic work they do.”
One thing is certain – that acknowledgement won’t stop when the New Year turns. All through 2024, we’ll be demonstrating how much our staff and volunteers are valued with an ongoing package of benefits that includes Simply Health cashback, wellbeing initiatives, mental health support, free independent financial advice, and yoga sessions.
https://www.stlukes-hospice.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/North_Prospect_Launch_Blog_Header-1.jpg7731030Robert Maltbyhttps://www.stlukes-hospice.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/st-lukes-hospice-plymouth.svgRobert Maltby2023-12-12 14:48:522024-01-29 14:01:25BLOG: A special Christmas thank you to St Luke’s staff and volunteers
St Luke’s Hospice Plymouth’s end of life Urgent Care Team ventured across the Tamar last week to visit their first patient at home in East Cornwall as part of a pilot service running until the end of March 2024.
We followed senior health care assistant Bee Daniels and nurse Jo Davis as they went to meet a very grateful Paul Treeby and his daughter, Jude Kitt.
It’s less than half a kilometre from one side to the other but crossing the Tamar Bridge represented a significant milestone for St Luke’s pilot East Cornwall Urgent Care Service.
Until last week it had been a bridge too far for the hospice’s “at home” teams who already clock up more than 80,000 miles a year taking our specialist care to the doorsteps of patients in Plymouth and surrounding areas of West and South Devon.
In a ground-breaking move, a four-month trial service has been launched to visit end of life patients and their families at home in a largely rural stretch from Saltash to Torpoint and the Rame Peninsula, up the Tamar Valley towards Callington and Launceston and across to Liskeard.
Patients in this area have benefited from St Luke’s care at Derriford Hospital and in the charity’s specialist unit at Turnchapel, but there has previously been no service available to support them either to remain at home or to care for them on discharge from hospital.
Senior healthcare assistant Bee and nurse Jo were thrilled and proud to be pioneers on a mission to make a positive difference to people’s lives, working closely with NHS healthcare colleagues across the water.
“The whole team are really excited to go there,” said Bee, in the driving seat as they passed the Welcome to Cornwall sign in the centre of the bridge. “It’s another big area for us to cover and it’s going to be a lot more rural nursing, but we’re all up for the challenge.”
That stalwart can-do attitude certainly came in handy as they turned off the A38 to snake through the Cornish countryside to meet Paul Treeby, the team’s first patient on the service’s first day.
Beneath bleak black clouds and intermittent heavy downpours, Bee drove carefully, bumping along increasingly muddy lanes until she hit Tarmac with grass growing down the middle, her view hemmed in by high hedges on either side.
Suddenly a beautiful rainbow and a glimmer of blue sky appeared in the distance beckoning Bee and Jo to one of the small farming communities that pepper the hinterlands between Liskeard and Callington.
“It’s a typical journey, really,” said Jo. “We’re based in the city, but we have a lot of isolated people to visit out in the countryside. We keep going come rain or shine, grass or gravel!”
St Luke’s Urgent Care is a healthcare assistant led service, so Jo wouldn’t normally be out visiting patients herself, except when there’s an urgent need for her nursing expertise.
“I put myself down for the first shift so that I can see what the challenges are and support the team while they are getting used to the area,” she explained.
With the satnav out of range, they managed to arrive in roughly the right place, but Paul’s tucked-away home wasn’t easy to find in the pouring rain, despite his instructions. Luckily, he lives in a friendly hamlet where everyone knows everyone, and hardy folk who walk their dogs in all weathers were eager to point Bee in the right direction.
There was an almost palpable sense of relief as Paul’s daughter, Jude Kitt, opened the door of her father’s bungalow and, along with black Labrador Harvey, welcomed Bee and Jo inside.
Any apprehension Paul had felt before their arrival vanished immediately as they asked him gently about himself, how he was feeling and what they could do to help.
“We build a rapport with patients very, very quickly,” explained Jo. “Going in on a daily basis you can quickly see how someone is and if there is escalation of symptoms you can deal with that. The patient can get what they need from us in a timely manner. We make sure everything is as easy as possible.”
Their role is also to liaise with the other health professionals involved in his care, including his GP and the NHS Cornwall palliative care nurse who gives Paul and Jude advice over the phone.
Paul, 75, has been living with prostate cancer for 10 years. After an operation, chemotherapy and radiotherapy, he was put on long-term chemotherapy to control the disease. But, in July this year – just a month after his dear wife Elizabeth’s death from leukaemia – Paul’s oncology team told him that the treatment had run its course and there was nothing more they could do.
It means the world to him to now be able to spend his remaining time at home in the community he knows and loves, with reassuring support from St Luke’s.
“I’ve been a country lad all my life. I was brought up on the farm. I was born at Blunts, down the road. Dad was killed in a tractor accident and Mother had three of us to look after so she took a job as a housekeeper for another farm at Menheniot. That was tough, but you just got on with it. When I was old enough, I went out to work and started digger driving, which I loved,” he said.
Paul and Elizabeth brought up their family on a smallholding near Trewidland – a tiny hamlet between Liskeard and Looe – and he made a living operating diggers for several local companies.
“We had around 40 acres and kept sheep through the winter and cut hay in summer. When we couldn’t cope with that any more, my son Tim took it on and bought us this bungalow to retire to.”
Paul was quick to praise Bee and Jo at the end of their visit.
“I was very impressed with St Luke’s team. It’s good to have them coming in to help me with any problems I’ve got. I think it will be a big benefit having them down here in Cornwall,” he said. “I think it’s something that’s got to be done. There’s a massive demand.
“They came in and made me feel at home. They talked about my tablets, and they took me in to have a wash. It was all very relaxed and no stress. That suits me down to the ground because I don’t do well with stress. That’s why I wouldn’t want to go back to hospital again.”
Jude, who lives four miles away at Pensilva, has been juggling her own family life with caring for her dad, with no real chance to grieve for her mother, who was the first person she would usually have talked things through with.
“It feels like a huge relief already. Dad deserves the best care and now we have got somebody coming every day who can help us. I feel like I have a team behind me now,” she said.
“The main thing is the continuation of people coming in so they will get to know Dad and recognise any day to day deterioration. I feel like it’s all been on me, and it’s been a bit overwhelming at times.”
Jo added: “There must be a lot of families who have been struggling up until now and it’s good to be able to tell them there is help on the way.”
The final word goes to Bee, who said: “Dying is a massive part of life. Everyone deserves to have the best death they can have, and we can help with that journey.”
https://www.stlukes-hospice.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/Urgent-Care-Service-East-Cornwall-Blog-Header.jpg7731030Gabby Notthttps://www.stlukes-hospice.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/st-lukes-hospice-plymouth.svgGabby Nott2023-12-13 16:15:462023-12-14 09:09:19BLOG: Pilot service takes expert St Luke’s hospice care to Cornish doorsteps
Royal Navy nurse Lieutenant Laura Bisset recently took time out from her role on board Britain’s largest and most powerful warship to learn about palliative care alongside St Luke’s Hospice Plymouth specialist nursing teams.
After a solid three months at sea deployed on HMS Queen Elizabeth as part of NATO operations in Norway and Scotland, the 35-year-old Queen Alexandra’s Royal Navy Nurse wanted to use some of her annual leave to do something worthwhile and completely different that would stretch her knowledge and experience.
She certainly ticked those boxes during her time with St Luke’s, witnessing the impact of our care at our inpatient unit at Turnchapel, on the road with our urgent care service, and on the wards with our experts at University Hospitals Plymouth.
Laura first heard about St Luke’s a couple of years ago when her friend’s mother, who had Motor Neurone Disease, was cared for as an inpatient.
“The care they gave her mum was just wonderful, and that’s something that families never forget. And the support they gave my friend was incredible too.”
When Laura got in touch with St Luke’s recently, Director of Clinical Services Tricia Davies invited her to spend some time watching our teams in action, giving her first-hand experience of how the hospice puts patients and their loved ones at the centre of everything they do.
“There is a lot of fear around dying and palliative care if you are not used to it, and it’s quite daunting doing something like this when all you have known is the Navy,” admitted Laura.
“But it has been really worthwhile and meaningful and such a lovely welcoming atmosphere. Everyone seems to really enjoy their jobs, even if it can be difficult. I don’t think I was fully expecting how much I would enjoy the experience.”
Laura, who was brought up in South Wales and Devon and has a house in Saltash, joined the Royal Navy 12 years ago as a rating and carried out her military training at HMS Raleigh at Torpoint.
Because she was already a qualified nurse, she was able to go straight onto the wards at Derriford where Royal Navy personnel work as part of the hospital team between deployments to keep up their skills.
Her experience on deployment includes time in Sierra Leone during the Ebola crisis, with the Royal Marines in Norway and at their training centre at Lympstone, and at Hedley Court in Surrey, a rehabilitation centre for injured servicemen.
Wanting more naval experience outside hospital settings, Laura was commissioned as an officer and took up her post in primary care as Senior Nursing Officer on board HMS Queen Elizabeth about a year ago – a huge contrast to end of life care.
“It has been an incredible role where I routinely work within a GP surgery with a population at risk of 500 service personnel but when we deploy that can double to about 1,400 sailors on board.
“I can be doing anything from chronic disease reviews to responding to emergency situations. Following an amazing initiative ‘Flagship Performance’ a large part of my role revolves around health promotion. It was set up by one of the doctors on board, Surgeon Lieutenant Commander Roocroft who aims to empower the sailors to leave the ship in better physical and mental health.”
Laura found a big contrast between that busy military setting – and its generally young, fit and healthy men and women – and the calming environment of St Luke’s inpatient unit.
“I realised I didn’t actually know much about hospices, and it was a real insight to learn that people don’t necessarily die there but can come in for symptom control and in some cases can return home.
“It was wonderful to see how the nurses and health care assistants have time to sit with the patients and listen to them, explain things and find ways around it if they have problem with their medication, for example. I liked how calm it was and that no one was rushing around.
“You are really trying to optimise their quality of life and look after their symptoms, with things like good nutrition, heat packs and complimentary therapies. I liked how the patients had lovely home cooked food, views out the window and the opportunity to go out into the garden.”
Laura, who worked in community care before training as a nurse, felt privileged to also visit patients in their own homes with St Luke’s Urgent Care Team.
“It was quite moving for me, being able to go and see people in their homes, where they spend so much of their lives and where they wanted to be with their families and pets. It seemed to be quite a good place to die.
“It was lovely seeing how everything the nurses and healthcare assistants were doing was so helpful and gentle.”
Finally, Laura joined our hospital team in the more familiar setting of Derriford Hospital. She saw how St Luke’s doctors and nurses work closely with NHS teams with the aim of discharging patients at the end of life, whenever possible, but always striving to make sure each individual achieves their preferred place of care, whether that is in hospital, at home or at our specialist unit.
Laura said: “I don’t know whether hospital is the right place for people who are dying. I know it’s not always possible, but observing the way St Luke’s look after people in the hospice and in their own homes showed me the importance of such worthwhile work at a time when patients and their families need it the most.
“The care and compassion shown by all St Luke’s teams has made me realise the incredible work they do and the requirement for such an important charity within our society,” added Laura. “I can’t thank Tricia enough for organising my time with St Luke’s.”
https://www.stlukes-hospice.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/Navy-Visit-December-2023-Blog-Header.jpg7731030Robert Maltbyhttps://www.stlukes-hospice.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/st-lukes-hospice-plymouth.svgRobert Maltby2023-12-06 12:10:002023-12-06 19:23:05BLOG: Nurse from Royal Navy flagship visits frontline of St Luke’s care
Big-hearted march backs care that goes the extra mile
A mass of big-hearted men will be marching through Plymouth on Saturday 6 April next year to support the compassionate end of life care St Luke’s Hospice Plymouth provides for local families at the toughest times in their lives.
Registration opens on 1 December for the hugely popular Men’s Day Out, an unmissable mix of miles, mates, memories and merrymaking that not only raises funds and awareness, but also opens the door to conversations about grief and bereavement.
This flagship annual event is one of the most popular and memorable happenings on the city’s calendar, with around 2,000 entrants signing up each year to march a 12km circular route, finishing with a pasty, a beverage, and a seat at the rugby.
Walkers and their generous sponsors bring in thousands of pounds each year to help fund St Luke’s invaluable hospice services for patients at home, in hospital and at the charity’s specialist unit at Turnchapel, 365 days a year.
Striding the streets together offers a unique camaraderie for those who have lost loved ones or are facing up to a terminal diagnosis in the family, while doing something positive and uplifting to support people in the local community.
Many take part to remember a friend or family member who was cared for by St Luke’s, and writing their loved one’s name on their official Men’s Day Out T-shirts helps to spur them on as they join the huge throng of men on the move.
Starting and finishing at Plymouth Albion RFC at Devonport, the event will kick off at 10am and follow a marked route through the city centre and along the waterfront, taking in Plymouth Hoe and the Barbican. Back at the rugby ground, walkers can enjoy a well-earned pasty and a beverage before witnessing our local boys in a clash with the Rams from Reading.
St Luke’s Head of Fundraising Penny Hannah said: “We’re thrilled to announce that Men’s Day Out will be striding ahead again in 2024, and so grateful for the loyal support of our sponsors JEM Scaffolding, and to so many of you who come back year after year to join in the fun, open your hearts and raise funds for St Luke’s.”
Registration for Men’s Day Out costs just £35, but that only covers the official T-shirt, refreshments, rugby ticket and event costs. It’s individual sponsorships and donations that really make a difference, and many entrants set themselves a fundraising target to tot up their total as they mark the miles.
Places are limited so it’s advised to register early for this well-loved event to avoid disappointment and to start rallying sponsors. Click here to find out more.
https://www.stlukes-hospice.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/Mens-Day-Out-2024-Blog-Header.jpg7731030Gabby Notthttps://www.stlukes-hospice.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/st-lukes-hospice-plymouth.svgGabby Nott2023-12-01 08:45:562023-12-06 13:58:12PR: Men’s Day Out 2024: Big-hearted march backs care that goes the extra mile
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