Tag Archives: carers
Charity cash stolen from 6 year old disabled boy who has Rett Syndrome
Raiders ransack disabled boy’s room to steal charity cash
RAIDERS broke into a severely disabled boy’s bedroom and ransacked the house before stealing £300 of charity cash.
The thieves broke into the house of six-year-old Chris Dupree, in the early hours of Saturday, stealing money which was ready to be used as the float for the James Hopkins Trust family fun day yesterday.
Chris, who has Rett syndrome and is unable to walk or talk, had his Abbeydale bedroom turned upside down as the thieves looked for their loot.
Norfolk’s new dementia unit to be opened 26th July 2011
Norfolk’s new dementia unit ready for topping–out
Edited by Andy Porter editor@wellbeingnorfolk.co.uk
The principle building work on Norfolk’s new Dementia Intensive Care Unit [DICU] is nearing completion and ready for the topping–out ceremony on 26 July 2011.
The event will be held on the Julian Hospital site in Norwich, home to the £13.7 million development. The 36–bedded DICU is part of Norfolk and Waveney Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust, representatives of which will attend the topping–out together with building contractors R G Carter and architects Ingleton Wood.
The unit is part of the mental health Trust’s aims to provide the best dementia care in the country by creating a Clinical Academy for Dementia.
Chickens rule the roost at nursing home
Memories will come flooding back with these chickens.
Residents at Hucknall’s Hazel Grove Nursing Home have welcomed three new residents this week in the form of a group of hens.
A NURSING home in Hucknall has paid a visit to the farm to come up with an innovative tool to help its treatment of dementia sufferers — a trio of chickens.
The Hazelgrove home, off Farleys Lane, bought the poultry after research suggested they comforted patients with dementia.
The research said patients who came into contact with animals often experience reduced blood-pressure and anxiety and improved social interaction and sleep patterns.
The National Institute of Clinical Excellence (NICE) also promotes the use of animals in treatment programmes.
Staff at Hazelgrove decided to give the idea a go on behalf of 18 residents who have dementia.