FEATURE ARTICLES
Assessing individual equipment needs
Mandy Clift, product manager, Patient and Post Acute Care UKI, Getinge Group, looks at how a simple to use classification system can help you to identify the correct mix of equipment required to deliver high quality care, while protecting staff safety
Implementing renewable heating solutions
Phil Mangnall, Jaga Heating Products, discusses the importance of safe, energy efficient, responsive heating in care homes
Measures to prevent the spread of infection
Paul Jakeway, marketing director at skin care specialist Deb, explains how strategically placed facilities, ongoing staff education and the right skin care products can help prevent the spread of infection
Setting the scene for custom-designed care
Karen Clayton, dementia environment specialist, Find Memory Care, explains how a government-funded project to promote custom-designed care for residents with dementia, led to overall benefits for staff, residents and their families as well as long-term cost savings
Promoting wellness using outdoor space
Gayle Souter-Brown, director, Greenstone Design UK, explains how to design a care home garden to make the most of the positive impact it can have on the overall environment
Acoustics, access and an eye on visual cues
Andrea Harman, concept developer for healthcare at manufacturer and developer of acoustic solutions, Saint Gobain Ecophon, considers the impact of good sound design on those with dementia in healthcare buildings and the difference it can make to patients, staff and visitors
Driving the move towards integrated care
Professor Gillian Leng, deputy chief executive at NICE, discusses how NICE is defining what high quality social care must look like Our vision at NICE is to see each and every individual get the support they need, whether they are in hospital or in their community, and for people to be treated with the respect and dignity they deserve.
Designing for people with dementia
Damian Utton, director, Pozzoni Architecture, outlines the principles of and the ways in which design can help to improve quality of life for older people and specifically for people living with dementia
Developing the caring environment
Where we live is vital to our security and to our wellbeing; this is true of every citizen, but particularly true of people who have to move into care environments, which should support them to live full lives, at times when they have illness or frailty, says Professor Martin Green, chief executive, Care England
Proper training and considered design essential
Phil Padgett, national sales manager and dementia specialist at medical equipment and services provider, Essential Healthcare Solutions, argues that staff looking after those living with dementia need both appropriate training and a proper understanding of the condition. He also sets out some of the basic interior design criteria to consider when fitting out and furnishing facilities to be ‘dementia-friendly’.
Dementia, designers, and dandelions
Garden designers, Debbie Carroll and Mark Rendell, from Step Change Design, carried out a research project in the care sector to answer a simple question, ‘Why aren’t care home gardens used more actively?’ As they explain, the answers found had little to do with the design of the outside spaces, and more to do with the complex phenomenon of care culture.
Latest Issues
Our story began in a shed in Devon where Frequency Precision's founder, Doug Dwyer, was a busy inventor. His mother was living in a nursing home so he made a pager system so that she could use to call for assistance easily. This got him thinking: how could he make a better, more discreet way to monitor people at risk whilst still retaining their...