Sunday, 01 August 2010
Oceania News
A new home sweet home
Monday, 31 August 2009 13:56

Southland Express, 20 August 2009:   When Dawn Huband saw an advertisementfor a one bedroom unit at Cargill Village in June, she thought it was worth a look and next month she and husband, George, will be moving into their new home. Dawn talked George, who admittedly was a bit apprehensive at first, into checking out the Cargill premises and they were both “taken back” by what they saw. “It’s got everything we need, no maintenance issues and no security problems,”
George said. The Hubands are very active 70-year-olds and the move to Cargill Village, allows them to carry on with their daily activities and interests which include fishing, scuba diving and electronics for George, while Dawn enjoys aerobics, bridge and her walking groups. The apartment option at Cargill, which is a part of Oceania Group, enables the couple to maintain their privacy, while also being able to participate in the social activities on offer including the spacious recreational rooms and lounges within the rest home facility. The Oceania Group pride themselves on setting the standard when it comes to senior living and strive to meet the needs of their residents, something the Hubands have already experienced first hand. George said it was essential to have somewhere safe to park his boat, so Oceania Group are building him a garage and Dawn has asked for an extractor fan to be installed in the bathroom, a request that will be fulfilled. The Hubands both agree the staff at Cargill have been more than accommodating and feel the move to the apartment will provide them with a warm, safe and comfortable home where both their and their family’s
needs will be met.
“It is a great feeling to know that as we grow older here and our needs increase, we will be looked after and our families won’t have to worry about us having a fall or anything like that.”
LJ Hooker urban marketing consultant Flo Coats has been working with the Hubands and other members of the senior community to secure their new homes at Cargill and she said there are many options to suit people’s varying needs.
“From town houses, to apartments and studios, all the homes are warm and spacious and we work alongside Oceania Group to cater for the needs and desires of the residents,” Mrs Coats said. “I really enjoy going out there to show people around because it’s such a welcoming environment, with beautiful homes and views.”
For further information on Cargill Village you can contact Flo Coats on 03 211 2119.

 
Redroofs filled with laughter
Friday, 26 June 2009 13:54

The Star (Dunedin) 25 June 2009

 

Visitors to Redroofs Rest Home are likely to be greeted by the delighteful sight of staff and residents dancing their way to afternoon tea to the strains of Ray Charles' I Can't stop loving you.
Manager Nina Lunn says this is often her experience as she arrives at work. "It's a really happy home here - lots of laughing. Sometimes when you walk in the door they're just hooting - not just the residents, the staff as well" Nina said.
"People come here to live out their lives and we support them to do that".  Management are committed to resident involvement in how Redroofs operates.  "This is their home. They have a say in how it's run, in what happens here and how it's handled" Nina said.
This can include content, activity times, outings or systems. The environment is relaxed and there are no rigid rules. Communication is key, and while three-monthly reviews are completed regarding the residents' views of Redroofs, Nina's open-door policy encourages the most input.
Activities co-ordinator Gayleen Dunn arranges a range of activities - exercise, walks, outings and lunches. Residents will take a trip to Luna Bar & Restaurant for a wine. Jigsaws are popular and a rowdy Euchre group has formed.
An excellent standard of resthome level care is provided. As part of the Oceania Group, Redroofs measures itselft to above-benchmark standards. This is evidenced-based above-average care measured on a monthly basis.

Nina points out that when people were looked after well they might never need hospital-level care. Two registered nurses are available during the day and on call every evening and overnight.
Redroofs routinely networks with Dunedin Hospital in regard to elderly care. Staff are hired based on skills and attitudes that fit with the Redroofs philosophy. Staff are experienced, qualified and mature, with a commitment to what the residents want. "Staff go over and above because we do care" Nina said.
Redroofs provides 49 beds, and recently opened five new single rooms with en-suites. With spacious private rooms for all residents, a sunny courtyard and decks with impressive views across to Flagstaff and the hills above Dunedin, Redroofs is set amid attractive, mature gardens. The home also has several independent-living units on site, which means it can offer a range of services from full rest-home care to short-term care, respite care, or independent living.
Food is prepared on site by chef Darryl Tweedie and Cook Pauline Field, so varying diets can easily be catered for. The food comprises restaurant-quality cuisine and home-made baking, with residents enjoying a menu of foods they like. Meat and vegetables were favourite fare, Nina said.

 

Family are welcome day or night - as it would be at home!

 

 
Facility provides a spectrum of care
Thursday, 30 April 2009 15:58

Horowhenua Mail, Thursday 30 April 2009

 

 

A new wing at Eldon, the senior care facility in Valley Road Paraparaumu, will provide additional hospital beds for the elderly population of Kapiti.

Facility Manager Theresa Jones says Eldon is part of the Oceania group, a nationwide network of 63 senior living facilities throughout New Zealand. The Paraparaumu facility provides a spectrum of care, from resthome to hospital and dementia care.

There is already provision for 93 people to be cared for at Eldon and the extensions will add another 41 single hospital rooms.

In the thoughtfully designed new wing, hospital residents will have assistance and care on hand 24 hours a day from trained, skilled staff, with a registered nurse on duty and emergency assistance at the push of a button.

The extensions are accessed from Eldon’s existing entry foyer and there are corridors of room surrounding two internal courtyards. The wing has its own nurses’ station and administrative rooms. The bedrooms are spacious with ample storage room for clothes and personal effects and with a shared ensuite.

Some of the rooms open onto the enclosed courtyards by way of sliding floor length doors. Cabling for telephones and computers is available in every room and residents may also bring their own television sets. Eldon has Sky availability for people who wish to pay the extra.

All beds can be adjusted in height to make treatments easier for medical staff, healthcare assistants and also to assist residents to maintain their own mobility.

Rooms have an emergency button by the bed and another by the door. There is an emergency pull cord in each bathroom that can be reached from the toilet or the shower should it be needed, as well as a call bell by the handbasin.

Display panels on the corridor ceiling show the source of the call and eh nurses have pagers. Call bells have a night mode setting, going directly to the pagers, so at night the sound of ringing bells is not intrusive for other patients.

Light tubes in the ceilings and the extensive use of windows facing courtyards and the surrounding landscape make for a light and airy atmosphere within the hospital wing.

Eldon has been well set up for socialising and activities. The main dining room and lounge in the new block is a bright, cheery room with large windows that look out to the hills in the semi-rural setting.

There are other lounges available to residents and visitors and bays with chairs in the corridors where people can sit and chat.

A large kwila deck on the west-facing the west-facing wall of the building affords an opportunity to spend time outdoors and a ramp with handrails leads to the lawns and gardens at the rear of Eldon.

One of the bedroom suites is larger than the others and will be used in palliative care situations where families of the patient wish to gather, sometimes for a number of days. The room has provision for extra chairs and possibly another bed and has a separate deck where family members can pop outside for a break.

Theresa says the suite gives Eldon the opportunity to offer patients and families greater privacy and time to be together with their loved family member.

The opening of the new wing will also provide employment opportunities for the Kapiti Coast. As it becomes occupied there will be need for another 20 healthcare assistants, for registered nurses and for ancillary staff, making Eldon one of the larger employers on the Coast. Theresa says “There are already 87 members of staff, both full and part timers”.

The facility does employ a small number of staff who have had no prior experience. These staff are enrolled on the ACE or Wellcare Programmes, both nationally recognised training courses and a dedicated training, registered nurse runs these programmes, Eldon also employs a dedicated education coordinator who organises and delivers the Oceania training programme.

Admission to Eldon’s senior care facility is by assessment for a level of care following a recommendation from a health professional.

Living Live to the full

The philosophy of Eldon and all Oceania group homes is to provide a warm and welcoming community for residents, with an extensive programme of recreational, social, creative and intellectual activities.

An important aspect of the care of all residents is the LIFE programme of targeted activities.

“The LIFE programme is unique to Oceania, and we are very proactive at Eldon in delivering the programme. “People set themselves a physical goal which is relevant to their specific needs. “For example, we had a resident who had a stroke and part of her recovery through the LIFE programme was to spend time at her home in the weekends. We worked on her mobility to get in and out of a car and she achieved that goal. Once at home she discovered she could no longer prepare the vegetables for the Sunday roast and that became her new goal. We successfully targeted exercises to strengthen her hands and enable her to hold a peeler. These were goals that mattered to her”.

Theresa says the programme has been shown to improve A new wing at Eldon, the senior care facility in Valley Road Paraparaumu, will provide additional hospital beds for the elderly population of Kapiti.

Facility Manager Theresa Jones says Eldon is part of the Oceania group, a nationwide network of 63 senior living facilities throughout New Zealand. The Paraparaumu facility provides a spectrum of care, from resthome to hospital and dementia care.

There is already provision for 93 people to be cared for at Eldon and the extensions will add another 41 single hospital rooms.

In the thoughtfully designed new wing, hospital residents will have assistance and care on hand 24 hours a day from trained, skilled staff, with a registered nurse on duty and emergency assistance at the push of a button.

The extensions are accessed from Eldon’s existing entry foyer and there are corridors of room surrounding two internal courtyards. The wing has its own nurses’ station and administrative rooms. The bedrooms are spacious with ample storage room for clothes and personal effects and with a shared ensuite.

Some of the rooms open onto the enclosed courtyards by way of sliding floor length doors. Cabling for telephones and computers is available in every room and residents may also bring their own television sets. Eldon has Sky availability for people who wish to pay the extra.

All beds can be adjusted in height to make treatments easier for medical staff, healthcare assistants and also to assist residents to maintain their own mobility.

Rooms have an emergency button by the bed and another by the door. There is an emergency pull cord in each bathroom that can be reached from the toilet or the shower should it be needed, as well as a call bell by the handbasin.

Display panels on the corridor ceiling show the source of the call and the nurses have pagers. Call bells have a night mode setting, going directly to the pagers, so at night the sound of ringing bells is not intrusive for other patients.

Light tubes in the ceilings and the extensive use of windows facing courtyards and the surrounding landscape make for a light and airy atmosphere within the hospital wing.

Eldon has been well set up for socialising and activities. The main dining room and lounge in the new block is a bright, cheery room with large windows that look out to the hills in the semi-rural setting.

There are other lounges available to residents and visitors and bays with chairs in the corridors where people can sit and chat.

A large kwila deck on the west-facing the west-facing wall of the building affords an opportunity to spend time outdoors and a ramp with handrails leads to the lawns and gardens at the rear of Eldon.

One of the bedroom suites is larger than the others and will be used in palliative care situations where families of the patient wish to gather, sometimes for a number of days. The room has provision for extra chairs and possibly another bed and has a separate deck where family members can pop outside for a break.

Theresa says the suite gives Eldon the opportunity to offer patients and families greater privacy and time to be together with their loved family member.

The opening of the new wing will also provide employment opportunities for the Kapiti Coast. As it becomes occupied there will be need for another 20 healthcare assistants, for registered nurses and for ancillary staff, making Eldon one of the larger employers on the Coast. Theresa says “There are already 87 members of staff, both full and part timers”.

The facility does employ a small number of staff who have had no prior experience. These staff are enrolled on the ACE or Wellcare Programmes, both nationally recognised training courses and a dedicated training, registered nurse runs these programmes, Eldon also employs a dedicated education coordinator who organises and delivers the Oceania training programme.

Admission to Eldon’s senior care facility is by assessment for a level of care following a recommendation from a health professional.

Living Live to the full

The philosophy of Eldon and all Oceania group homes is to provide a warm and welcoming community for residents, with an extensive programme of recreational, social, creative and intellectual activities.

An important aspect of the care of all residents is the LIFE programme of targeted activities.

“The LIFE programme is unique to Oceania, and we are very proactive at Eldon in delivering the programme. “People set themselves a physical goal which is relevant to their specific needs. “For example, we had a resident who had a stroke and part of her recovery through the LIFE programme was to spend time at her home in the weekends. We worked on her mobility to get in and out of a car and she achieved that goal. Once at home she discovered she could no longer prepare the vegetables for the Sunday roast and that became her new goal. We successfully targeted exercises to strengthen her hands and enable her to hold a peeler. These were goals that mattered to her”.

Theresa says the programme has been shown to improve overall health and cognitive abilities and won an Excellence Treatment Award at the New Zealand health Innovation awards in 2007.

The senior recreation officer at Eldon is a trained teacher and a caregiver and is offering a lively and meaningful programme of activities including baking, crafts and flower arranging, crosswords, happy hour’s and a Men’s Club.

Eldon residents are encouraged to keep up contact with the wider community. Theresa says the mini bus goes on regular excursions and residents take part in community programmes such as Care and Craft.

The facility also welcomes regular visits from community groups to entertain and visit residents.

A podiatrist visits every six weeks and there is a hair salon for residents.

Meals are home-cooked and delicious and Eldon provides tailored menus for those on special diets.

The Oceania promise sums up the approach to care for the elderly at Eldon.  “We promise to provide all our residents with a safe and friendly home, bringing out the best in people by giving individual care, preserving freedom of choice and keeping in touch with the family and the community”.


overall health and cognitive abilities and won an Excellence Treatment Award at the New Zealand health Innovation awards in 2007.

The senior recreation officer at Eldon is a trained teacher and a caregiver and is offering a lively and meaningful programme of activities including baking, crafts and flower arranging, crosswords, happy hour’s and a Men’s Club.

Eldon residents are encouraged to keep up contact with the wider community. Theresa says the mini bus goes on regular excursions and residents take part in community programmes such as Care and Craft.

The facility also welcomes regular visits from community groups to entertain and visit residents.

A podiatrist visits every six weeks and there is a hair salon for residents.

Meals are home-cooked and delicious and Eldon provides tailored menus for those on special diets.

The Oceania promise sums up the approach to care for the elderly at Eldon.  “We promise to provide all our residents with a safe and friendly home, bringing out the best in people by giving individual care, preserving freedom of choice and keeping in touch with the family and the community”.

 

 
Waireka home a gem
Wednesday, 22 April 2009 13:38

Bush Telegraph, Monday 13 April 2009

 

Letter to Editor:
Two months ago, out of necessity, we moved my mother from a rent home in Hawke's Bay to Waireka in Pahiatua. Understandably I was concerned for her care and welfare and having had to personal involvement with Waireka, I really didn't know what to expect.
I write this letter to tell the people of our district just how lucky we are to have such a wonderful facility in our community. I cannot believe just how much this move has improved my mother's day-to-day life, not only because I am more readily able to visit and spend time wit her, but also because of the awesome care she receives at the hands of the registered nurses and caregivers at this wonderful facility.
We, as a community, are truly blessed to have such a wonderful rest home in our town that provides not only for the day-to-day care of the elderly but that also has an excellent hospital wing, together with palliative and respite care beds.
Mum has suffered for many years with venous ulcers - she has chronic varicose veins and has been afflicted with ulcers on an off for the past 20 years. When we moved Mum to Pahiatua she'd had five years of suffering with both legs affected by the most dreadful ulcers - she had been treated by the HB Area Health Board and a local dermatologist regularly for five years and we were told there was no hope of these ulcers healing. Mum has suffered in agony for years with a condition that inhibited her lifestyle so much that she lost all her self-confidence which resulted in her becoming completely housebound following our father's death.
I just want to tell the people of the Pahiatua Disctrict that we have the best aged-care facility available and it is so under-utilised! No wonder the Trust had to sell - they had no choice. Had it not been for the sale to the Oceania Group I firmly beliee that Waireka would no longer exist. The sale to this group has ensure the protection of this wonderful facility but we as a community still need to get behind it and support the fact that we have something here that saves local residents so much time and travel whilst providing superb care for our elderly relatives.
I am very new to the care of the elderly but from what I have seen in the past two months, Pahiatua has the best facility for the elderly and we need to work to keep it!
We sometimes hear negatives about Waireka out in the community, but our family is so overwhelmed with the care our mother has received that we want to shout their praises from the rooftops. For anyone who has been told the food isn't good .... try going somewhere else and see what the residents at other homes are given - our mother is better fed here than she ever was in a brand new modern facility in a large city. Members of the public when criticising our wonderful resthome need to keep uppermost in the mind that their negativity could result in less residents - it's not rocket science - if Waireka has difficulty attracting new residents, then the facility will be at risk.
We as family, cannot praise enough the wonderful caring professional staff at Waireka - moving our mother here was the best thing we could have done. So when considering elderly relative's on-going resthome care, why send them out of town when we have the very best here in our own backyard. We all know the old adage - "If you don't use it, lose it".
Letter to Editor:
Two months ago, out of necessity, we moved my mother from a rent home in Hawke's Bay to Waireka in Pahiatua. Understandably I was concerned for her care and welfare and having had to personal involvement with Waireka, I really didn't know what to expect.
I write this letter to tell the people of our district just how lucky we are to have such a wonderful facility in our community. I cannot believe just how much this move has improved my mother's day-to-day life, not only because I am more readily able to visit and spend time wit her, but also because of the awesome care she receives at the hands of the registered nurses and caregivers at this wonderful facility.
We, as a community, are truly blessed to have such a wonderful rest home in our town that provides not only for the day-to-day care of the elderly but that also has an excellent hospital wing, together with palliative and respite care beds.
Mum has suffered for many years with venous ulcers - she has chronic varicose veins and has been afflicted with ulcers on an off for the past 20 years. When we moved Mum to Pahiatua she'd had five years of suffering with both legs affected by the most dreadful ulcers - she had been treated by the HB Area Health Board and a local dermatologist regularly for five years and we were told there was no hope of these ulcers healing. Mum has suffered in agony for years with a condition that inhibited her lifestyle so much that she lost all her self-confidence which resulted in her becoming completely housebound following our father's death.
I just want to tell the people of the Pahiatua Disctrict that we have the best aged-care facility available and it is so under-utilised! No wonder the Trust had to sell - they had no choice. Had it not been for the sale to the Oceania Group I firmly beliee that Waireka would no longer exist. The sale to this group has ensure the protection of this wonderful facility but we as a community still need to get behind it and support the fact that we have something here that saves local residents so much time and travel whilst providing superb care for our elderly relatives.
I am very new to the care of the elderly but from what I have seen in the past two months, Pahiatua has the best facility for the elderly and we need to work to keep it!
We sometimes hear negatives about Waireka out in the community, but our family is so overwhelmed with the care our mother has received that we want to shout their praises from the rooftops. For anyone who has been told the food isn't good .... try going somewhere else and see what the residents at other homes are given - our mother is better fed here than she ever was in a brand new modern facility in a large city. Members of the public when criticising our wonderful resthome need to keep uppermost in the mind that their negativity could result in less residents - it's not rocket science - if Waireka has difficulty attracting new residents, then the facility will be at risk.
We as family, cannot praise enough the wonderful caring professional staff at Waireka - moving our mother here was the best thing we could have done. So when considering elderly relative's on-going resthome care, why send them out of town when we have the very best here in our own backyard. We all know the old adage - "If you don't use it, lose it". A. Franklin

 
New Zealand 1st for the Aged Care Sector
Thursday, 02 April 2009 08:54

For some time now in the media a degree of negativity has been attached to the Aged Care Sector due to some rather startling examples of poor care delivery.

The perception of poor public confidence in the Sector is something that is generally acknowledged as being on the increase and we find that families are becoming more discerning and enquiring when seeking to find an appropriate facility for their loved one.

Oceania wish to move someway in restoring this confidence and to this end and in the spirit of openess and transparency we have taken the significant decision to publish on our website, all Certification and Surveillance audit reports.

Certainly in some cases our results have not fully attained to the Standards but where we have been found wanting we have initiated corrective action to remedy.That's the important point, that we are looking to constantly improve the standard of our care to our residents.

You may also be aware that the Ministry of Health intends to publish these reports on their web site from the 1st of July.

For further information please click here

 
From eating disorders to elderly people
Thursday, 12 March 2009 09:43

Ashburton Guardian, Monday 9 March 2009

 

Cameron Courts’ new facility manager Anna-Maree Todd has gone from dealing with eating disorders, to elderly people.
The two may sound worlds apart, but strangely, the two areas of nursing actually weren’t that different, which had made settling in to her new role much easier, Ms Todd said.
“With eating disorders you often got some fairly physically compromised people with mental and emotional issues,” Ms Todd said.
“So there is a lot of cross comparison really.”
For nearly six years, Ms Todd had worked as the co-ordinator for the eating disorder programme at Dunedin’s private psychiatric hospital, Ashburn Clinic, before upping her roots and moving her life to Ashburton, to take over the day-to-day running of Cameron Courts.
While there, she also took over the role of quality co-ordinator, which helped her prepare for her latest challenge.
“Once you’ve done quality, you kind of can’t get it out of your system because you learn it and, because you know it, it becomes quite rigid in your mind,” she said.
“It’s all about patient safety.”
Cameron Courts had been through many changes in recent months. Ms Todd takes over the role of Carol O’Reilly, who left after 19 years at Cameron Courts, while the rest home was also recently taken over by the Oceania Group.
Three weeks into her new role, Ms Todd was basing herself in one of the rest home’s lounges for the moment while alterations were done to the facility’s offices and administration area.
She was finding her feet with the help of reliable staff, wading through the paperwork, and knew her way around. But she is taking it one day at a time when it comes to learning people’s names.
She said getting to know all of the 27 patients, villa residents, staff, management, volunteers and residents’ families had been one of the hardest things since she took on the role, but she was taking it one day at a time and making steady progress.
“Having interaction with people is important in getting to know people,” she said.
Although she had no major plans to change anything at Cameron Courts, Ms Todd said she had her own style and was starting to put her mark on things.
“And hopefully that will have a positive impact on everything else.”
Ms Todd, who has a nine-year-old son Jack, is not completely new to Ashburton. She lived here in the late 1990s when she worked as a massage therapist at Mirror Image, and also worked as a nail technician.
She originally thought of training as a physiotherapist, but chose nursing instead due to the broad scope of choices when she was qualified. A placement on a psych-geriatric ward prompted her to take the path she did. “I never thought for a minute I would end up doing psychiatric nursing, but I loved it,” she said.
She didn’t think she’d ever take a role like the one she’s just started either, but again, she’s loving it.

By Erin Bishop, Ashburton Guardian, 9 March 2009

 
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