Category Archives: Carers

Norfolk mental health call centre set to hire extra staff to cope with demand

Mental health chiefs in Norfolk are set to begin a recruitment drive after being surprised by the volume of patient referrals to a new service.

Tuesday, February 11, 2014
6:30 AM

Norfolk and Suffolk NHS Foundation Trust (NSFT) started its access and assessment service almost a year ago to create a singe point of contact for GPs across the county.

But the mental health trust is looking to boost staffing numbers at its call centre at Hellesdon Hospital after missing referral targets.

The organisation, which has been redesigning services over the last two years, is looking to hire two band 6 level staff and two band 5 level staff to extend the opening hours of the service from five days a week to six.

Would you put your life on hold to care for an ex who fell ill?

Rachel did – for the husband she divorced 11 years ago. Odd? No, she says it’s her duty

  • Rachel Adriano, 67, looks after her ex-husband who has terminal cancer
  • She divorced from Andy after 38 years
  • Rachel takes him to hospital and was there to call an ambulance when needed

By Frances Hubbard

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Caring for the ill can cost you your freedom

The writer Mary Kenny has cared for her husband diligently following his stroke. But at what personal cost, she asks herself in a new book

 

Before the falls: Richard West reported on the Vietnam War, but his life with Mary was to change for ever after his stroke at the age of 66

It was 1996 and I had travelled to Bordeaux in France, with my sons, for a family wedding. My husband, Richard West, chose not to come along. That was OK by me: we were not one of those couples who did everything together and family weddings were not his gig. Richard’s gig, preferably, was being in Vietnam, or the Balkans, or anywhere, really: he’d been a foreign correspondent and wandering reporter all his life.

This was just before the era of the ubiquitous mobile phone, so I am not quite sure how the message reached me: but family networks were alerted and I received the instruction to ring London because Richard, then aged 66, was in hospital after a stroke. He was not in any danger but I needed to return to England as soon as possible. I remember thinking, “Our life is going to change: but I am not going to let this take over my life.”