Category Archives: Carers

Liverpool hosts first 'disability Games'

South Liverpool sports academy welcomes disability games

The event was an opportunity for local people with disabilities to experience competitive sport.

 

The first Disability Sport  Regional Games has taken  place in south Liverpool,  bringing together 250  competitors in seven sports.

The games were held  between May 10 and 12 at  Greenbank Sports Academy.

Games organiser Steve  Hoskins said: “Greenbank’s  first north west regional games  was a big success – everyone  who took part really enjoyed it  and next year we’ll be back but  bigger and better.”

The aim of the event was to  give as many disabled people as  possible the chance to  experience competition at a  regional level.  It was also a  chance to showcase the new  disability sport for electric  wheelchair users: Power  Hockey.

Cuts to adult social services in Norfolk are going to get worse

Norfolk is facing a “significant challenge” because an ageing population is heaping pressure on social services at a time when the money to tackle the problem is shrinking, council bosses have warned.

Bosses at Norfolk County Council said the number of people contacting the council with a social care need has soared from 34,200 to 64,000 in the past five years – and is only going to increase.

And union leaders have warned that, following the problems revealed in Norfolk County Council’s children’s services department, further cuts in budgets will mean cracks could next appear in services for vulnerable adults.

Dementia Awareness Week should promote the use of the Montessori method

Judith Potts

Judith Potts was an actress and is now a voice, acting and presentation coach. She is married with two children, three stepchildren and is the proud grandmother to two grandsons. She lives in west London and Yorkshire. In 2008 she was diagnosed with breast cancer. She can be contacted at judith.potts@telegraph.co.uk and is on Twitter @JudithPotts.

 

This week is Dementia Awareness Week; a time to reflect on the huge numbers of people with this illness who are living in care homes which have nothing to offer their residents beyond the most basic of care. I have visited too many of these sorts of “homes” and been shocked to see elderly residents, suffering from dementia, left to sit in the same chair from morning until night, with no attempt being made to encourage them to join in with any activities. If, indeed, the home offers any, other than a box of crayons and a colouring book.

On one occasion I visited a relative who I found, as usual, sitting alongside a widescreen television, with the sound blaring in her ear. Her chair faced the same way as the television, which meant she could not see the screen – even if she wanted to watch a programme. Happily, she is now in a Care Home with staff who provide companionship, stimulation and kindness. She is surrounded by jigsaw puzzles, duplo and other activities. A “Memory Lane” reminds her of times gone by; appropriate songs are sung and played; visiting musicians entertain and she is treated as a person in her own right. Her medication has been quartered, she speaks again and can weight-bear – all in the space of a month.