110 likes | 199 Views
Young at Heart Salisbury Hospital. Creative time with older patients. Aim: To improve patients’ experience of care in our hospital, with a focus on older patients, including those with confusion and dementia.
E N D
Young at HeartSalisbury Hospital Creative time with older patients
Aim: To improve patients’ experience of care in our hospital, with a focus on older patients, including those with confusion and dementia. How? By delivering a programme of regular creative activities on the wards, which break through the boredom of a hospital day and raise patients’ spirits through stimulating, positive and creative interaction. Music, poetry, dance, storytelling and creative reminiscence sessions were delivered to patients by highly skilled arts professionals, either in day rooms or on the wards; scheduled in consultation with ward staff and artists April 2011: 2 x 45 mins sessions on 2 wards March 2012: 6 x 45 mins sessions on 4 wards benefitting some 30 patients each week
Practicalities: Scheduled sessions on Wednesdays and Thursdays at same time each week to become part of ward routines. Co-ordinator regularly visits wards to remind staff and keep them informed about sessions. Meetings with ward staff to review the programme and monitoring forms completed after each session for feedback and evaluation. Creative planning meetings for artists to share experiences and ideas.
“Is it too cheeky to ask for an artist every day?” Charge Nurse, Redlynch Ward Chris Hurn and Victoria Gater playing African Xylophones on Redlynch ward Elevate concert series: April 2014
Outputs: Since the start of the programme in April 2011, Young at Heart delivered 160 ward sessions in the first year, And 240 in the second year, with a total of 2,000 + patient contacts. Some patients took part in several sessions. Extension into other hospitals: Since June 2012 Young at Heart also takes place once a week in Shaftesbury Hospital, and since December 2012 in Sherborne Hospital – starting with one session a week and expanding to 2 sessions a week from April 2013 Rebecca Seymour working at Salisbury Hospital for Young at Heart
Rosie Mead playing at Sherborne Hospital, Young at Heart
Young at Heart ended in July 2013 and has now been replaced by a broader programme based on a similar concept, with more strings attached… The new programme, entitled Elevate, successfully received funding from the Arts Council in July 2013 for 2 years. Elevate is also part funded by Salisbury Hospital’s Stars Appeal and the League of Friends Seckou Keita playing the Kora, Elevate concert series: December 2013
Expansion of creative sessions with artists on wards and day rooms: Salisbury – 4 sessions, 3 days a week Sherborne – 2 sessions per week Shaftesbury – 1 session per week 10 artists delivering sessions: musicians, dancers, story tellers, creative reminiscence, poets Tim Laycock on Farley Stroke Unit
Ken Aiso: Elevate concert series: November 2013 Monthly concert series: top class musicians performing on wards and in public areas - eghospital restaurant Case studies:patients, staff and artist feedback collated every week Evaluative study with Winchester University, Centre for Arts as Wellbeing Intern scheme: supporting new and established artists to work in Arts and health settings
Feedback “You’ve bucked my wife up no end. I thought it was wonderful. The best medicine in the hospital!” “Thank you so much for talking to me, you know my whole life history now and this morning I didn’t know who I was.” “He was a right misery till you turned up” Quite a few members of staff had a ‘jig’ as they came through. J doesn’t even normally speak, but now she’s singing! The things you bring our patients are really making a difference. What you do is wonderful. Thank you.
Salisbury Hospital Trust aspires to give every patient an outstanding experience