L-R: Sonia Lees from Nottinghamshire Hospice care team, Alice Toseland, her daughter Lynda
Nottinghamshire Hospice has launched a new overnight nursing service to help patients and carers in crisis, in a move which may cut the need for emergency hospital admissions.
The seven-night-a-week Hospice Night Support service will support patients and carers with urgent need for care or emotional support in the night. They will answer call-outs from District Nursing services, social workers or GPs who may be concerned about a patient as well as from Hospice at Home staff working alone in a patient’s home. They will also respond to calls from carers in crisis.
The service has been set up to do the following:
- Help more people live independently for as long as possible and to die at home with dignity and support.
- Help reduce emergency end of life hospital admissions.
- Provide an extra layer of palliative care to support the District Nursing, GP out of hours services and the East Midlands Ambulance Service where they are concerned about a patient.
- Help carers be more resilient so they can look after loved ones at home for as long as possible.
- Provide emotional support and care for patients and their families.
The hospice has recruited four experienced healthcare assistants who have been trialling the service for the past four weeks, and it is already proving beneficial to patients.
Alice Toseland, 80, was given just a few weeks to live when she learnt her kidney cancer had spread. She was keen to get home from hospital, and after Nottinghamshire Hospice stepped in she was able to be discharged.
As lives on her own with carers visiting three times a day, the Hospice Night Support service has taken pressure off family members who would otherwise have needed to come over in the night or stay all night. The team have been able to offer emotional support as well as helping Alice get to the bathroom in the night.
Her daughter Lynda said:
“It was such a relief when the hospice stepped in. They pulled out all the stops. Mum was desperate to get home and it meant she could come home a lot quicker than she would otherwise have done. I’d recommend this service. They are absolutely superb.”
Jo Polkey, Director of Care Services at Nottinghamshire Hospice, said:
“This new service provides an extra layer of support for people with a terminal illness and their carers in need of sudden urgent help in the night.
“Demand for our Hospice at Home service has increased so this new team will help us meet the needs of more Nottinghamshire patients and their families who need dedicated palliative care in the final days and hours of their lives. It will also help us reach those who aren’t currently using our services but may benefit from our care.
“In cases where Night District Nursing staff don’t have resources or capacity for a longer visit our team can step in to provide personal care or emotional support at a patient’s home. Emotional support for patients and families is also vital when mainstream services aren’t available until the next morning.
“We’re very grateful to the Jones 1986 Charitable Trust and to all our other funders for their generous grants which have enabled us to provide this new service.”
Currently more than 1,900 people with a terminal illness in Nottingham and Nottinghamshire die without their end of life needs being met. Those most at risk are aged over 85, people from deprived areas, living alone or with a non-cancer diagnosis.
For more information visit Nottinghamshire Hospice
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