Crucial role created to provide support to discharged patients

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7th July 2021

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Article from the Aberdeen Evening Express

A new NHS Grampian role – the first of its kind – has been created to help discharged patients who are at greater risk of feeling isolated or alone.

The health board’s community support coordinator will play a crucial part in getting people settled at home after they have been discharged from hospital in Aberdeen, Aberdeenshire and Moray.

Made possible from the funds allocated through NHS Charities Together, NHS Grampian Endowment Fund is working in partnership with the Grampian Third Sector Interfaces (TSIs) to recruit someone for the two-year project.

The community support coordinator will work together with Aberdeenshire Volunteer Action (ACVO) and TSI Moray to deliver the support across a number of locations in the north-east, which have been chosen based on them being in the current highest areas for discharge and readmissions.

‘Crucial link with hospital staff and volunteers’

Sheena Lonchay, operational manager for NHS Grampian Charities, said: “We’re delighted to be working in partnership with the TSIs on this new and exciting role.

“This person will have a crucial link with hospital staff and volunteers and help people to get out of hospital and settled back into home and the community.

“From supporting somebody with their transport and shopping to matching local volunteers to people being discharged from hospital these will be the key responsibilities required for the role.

This project will build, better connect and coordinate what is already available in the third sector to support post-discharge.

In addition, there is hope it will help realise and continue to help learning from the community Covid response.

The role will be home-based and will be at the hub of post-hospital discharge care, while harnessing the goodwill in communities.

Better connect and coordinate

Maggie Hepburn, chief executive of ACVO, said: “This project is based on each partners’ specific expertise and builds on the resource and strength of communities that emerged during the pandemic to better connect these community networks to statutory acute health services and know-how.

“It will be a test of change for an accelerated discharge to home model based on community and volunteer integration.”

For full article: Aberdeen Evening Express


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