Residents paint the town with curiosity in scavenger hunt antics

The activity has given residents a sense of purpose and connection to their community. [Source: The Courier Mail]

A Bundaberg aged care facility is using a unique approach to keep residents engaged, stimulated and happy with a town-wide scavenger hunt.

Small colourful rocks were painted by Forest View Aged Care Childers resident which have since been hidden around the township for locals to find. While none have been found yet, successful scavengers can return the rock to the facility, meet the residents and receive a free coffee or hot chocolate voucher for the facility’s public cafe.

The facility’s Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Julie Mayer, said the activity has seen a reduction in agitation, lowered medication rates and boosted engagement for all residents, even those with significant cognitive impairments.

“Typically in nursing homes, when someone is agitated they just give them medicine to calm them down,” Ms Mayer told The Courier Mail.

The facility has a multipurpose approach to caring for residents – caring for them in-house with engaging activities to extend their capabilities, partnering with the community, and inviting them into the facility to encourage interaction and show locals how residents live. This is facilitated by themed monthly open days where locals can visit the facility and engage with residents. 

“We engage with the community for them to understand that the people who come into the aged care facility don’t come here to die, they come here to live the next chapter of their life,” Ms Mayer said. 

“People who were frightened to come into aged care because ‘that’s where you go to die’ are now coming in to engage in activities, fun days, open days, so they feel comfortable here for when they do need to come in.”

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Our Royal Commission Coverage: this week mental health is addressed

We are following the Royal Commission closely and will be providing regular updates to keep you informed. The Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety resumed hearings on Wednesday after breaking due to the pandemic. The hearings this week are about the availability of mental, oral and dental, and allied health services in aged... Read More

Is wages theft of aged-care staff more widespread? Union calls for sector-wider audit

  The union representing aged care workers has called for an audit of providers to ensure staff are receiving their full entitlements, after the Fair Work Ombudsman found that two providers had underpaid staff over several years. Health Services Union national president, Gerard Hayes, said underpaying aged care staff could be much more widespread in... Read More

Seniors and Families Across the Globe Are Knitting Pouches And Mittens For Injured Australian Wildlife

It is impossible to understate the devastating effects that bushfires have had on the Australian public and landscape. Hardworking, everyday Australians have lost their lives, families have lost their homes, and the scorched earth that was once home to some of the planets most unique wildlife has become an animal graveyard of unfathomable proportions. It... Read More
Advertisement
Exit mobile version