Another benefit for residents is that they’ve been able to have online appointments with their GPs who haven’t been able to visit the care home since lockdown. Dr Mellor and Partners have been willing to work closely with Thornhill House to make this happen. They log in to make their calls online, see the residents who need medical attention, then issue any necessary prescriptions.
It’s not only residents and their families who have been helped through this initiative. Staff, too, have been able to keep in touch with their families online. Coleen, 64, is a care assistant who has worked at Thornhill House for 31 years. She doesn’t have a mobile phone, and since lockdown she hasn’t been able to see her son and his family who live some distance away. She says, “Christian has been letting me talk to him on FaceTime and it’s been lovely.”
Maggie, 62, is deputy manager and has worked at Thornhill House for nine years. She says, “I cannot work these fancy phones so I won’t have one.” Her daughter has two young children with disabilities, one of whom needs shielding. Before lockdown they came to Maggie’s house daily, but now she can’t see them for at least three months. Maggie says, “I can speak to them on the phone but it’s not the same as seeing their faces.” Seeing her grandchildren online has made a huge difference to Maggie’s wellbeing.
At Thornhill, staff and residents have been finding a variety of creative ways for residents to keep in touch with family members who don’t use Skype or WhatsApp, with Facebook live videos of events allowing families to log on to see the residents in real time or catch up with the video later. But of course not all families are on social media. So, in a further step towards inclusivity, Christian has had a DVD made of recent Thornhill House events that families can have as a keepsake.
Through the coronavirus and beyond, flexible and inclusive innovations like this will be much needed to support people’s wellbeing, at home and in places like Thornhill. Barnsley’s initiative has inspired other Councils to look at their stock, with Belfast City Council refurbishing 30 tablets.
Barnsley joined the UK Network of Age-friendly Communities in 2019 and are working towards becoming a member of the WHO Global Network.