Wednesday, 1 June 2016

Improving oral health in Zimbabwe


Monica Zendera, a Dental Therapist within the Trust’s Salaried Dental Service, recently travelled to Zimbabwe with Dentaid to provide treatment for local residents. 

The trip had an extra special meaning for Monica though, as she explains here.



I was born and raised in Zimbabwe before I moved to the UK in 2003, when I was 15. I first heard about Dentaid at a dentistry conference. The charity had only visited Zimbabwe once before. As soon as I heard about their second visit, I knew I had to get involved. It was my time to give back and help the people of Zimbabwe. 

I started fundraising and, with the help of friends, family, colleagues and well-wishers, I raised over £2,000 to fund my trip.

Tuesday, 31 May 2016

A poem for World No Tobacco Day

31 May is World No Tobacco Day. To celebrate, we're sharing a poem from a service user who has given up smoking. The poem below was written by Shelly, a patient at The Wells Road Centre.



Smoking


I gave up smoking
As I started choking 
My cravings are kicking in
But I’m going to win
No more fags for me
I will live, just wait and see

People around me are having a drag
On their life threatening fag, 
I wish people would learn, 
That smoking causes their arteries to burn 

Think about those you love, 
Think how they will feel when you’re sent above, 
Smoking causes death too quick
So use this time to quit. 

Our Trust is going Smokefree from October 2016. This means that smoking will not be allowed in our buildings or grounds. To find out more, visit www.nottinghamshirehealthcare.nhs.uk/smokefree.

Friday, 27 May 2016

Seeds of hope at Highbury

Preparations to open an allotment garden at Highbury are well underway, so we caught up with Suzanne Foulk from The Live Project to find out more.




There’s been a lot happening on the Come Grow With Me @ Highbury allotment garden recently, in preparation for our official opening on the 16 June at our Summer Fayre.

Monday, 23 May 2016

47 years working at Rampton Hospital


Jan Wilkinson worked at Rampton Hospital for 47 years before retiring last week. Before she left, we asked Jan to reflect on her time there and the changes she has seen over the years.

Of course, Rampton Hospital was different in 1969 when I started working here. There were less than 30 staff on the administration side of the workforce, and if I remember correctly the hospital employed a total of approximately 600 staff (there are now 1500). At that time the hospital housed 1200 or so patients, whereas today there are around 350.

Thursday, 12 May 2016

What's it like to be a mental health nurse?

12 May is International Nurses' Day. We’re all familiar with the role of physical health nurses, but you might not know as much about psychiatric nurses. We spoke to Steven Daykin, who is a Ward Manager at Highbury Hospital, about what a psychiatric nurse does and what being a nurse means to him.



I got into psychiatric nursing because I had been around mental illness from a young age. My Grandma had Alzheimer’s, and from around the age of 10 I spent many a day in a psychiatric hospital in Derby. I was around very ill people, who didn’t know who they were and who were saying quite strange things. They were often emotional or sad, and this became a normal everyday environment for me.

Tuesday, 12 April 2016

The A Word: fact or fiction?

The A Word is a BBC One drama about a family struggling to come to terms with 5 year old Joe being diagnosed with autism. We asked Autism Spectrum Disorder Nurse Consultant Jacqueline Dziewanowska, who works with adults with autism, what she thought to the programme.


Feeling on the outside


I often hear stories of childhood experiences very similar to those shown in the programme. The parent’s experience of inviting the whole class to a birthday party and their child never being invited to other children’s parties. The experience of other adults judging when the child has a meltdown, people staring in supermarkets and the parent feeling a failure because their child is different.

What was portrayed sensitively was when Joe’s mum stays outside and watches Joe in the playground. The pain she feels as Joe stands by himself against the wall in the playground is a scene that both parents and the person with autism can often remember well.

Monday, 4 April 2016

That winning feeling

Trevor arriving at the awards
Trevor Clower is an active member of the Trust and our Involvement Centre, as a volunteer and parent carer. Trevor won the Unsung Hero Award at our staff awards, the Outstanding Service Contribution and Recognition Scheme (OSCARS), in March. Here’s how he felt to be a winner.

Getting a phone call to say I had been nominated for an OSCAR completely floored me. It was amazing to find out that so many people had written about me to put me forward for an award.

Being nominated was the most overwhelming experience I have had in my life, short of seeing my two children being born, that would always take precedence I feel.

I didn’t think the feeling of being nominated would ever be topped, until I arrived at the awards ceremony.