‘Living Well with Dementia’ ~ Conference hosted by Saint Luke’s Home Education Centre in Cork

More than 300 delegates from all over Ireland attended the ‘Living Well with Dementia’ conference organised by St. Luke’s Home Education Centre in Cork.  Welcoming the assembly of participants, including nurses, care assistants and consultants, the Chairman of the Board of Directors, Dr Paul Colton, said that the principle which should underpin our caring for others is compassion and we should care for others as we would wish to be cared for ourselves.

AT the St Luke's Home Education Centre, Cork annual conference 2015 were (l-r) Dr Paul Colton (Chairman, Board of Directors, St Luke's Home), David O'Brien (CEO of St Luke's Home), Tadgh Daly (CEO of Nursing Homes Ireland)

At the St Luke’s Home Education Centre, Cork annual conference 2015 were (l-r) Dr Paul Colton (Chairman, Board of Directors, St Luke’s Home), David O’Brien (CEO of St Luke’s Home), Tadgh Daly (CEO of Nursing Homes Ireland) Photo:  Gerard McCarthy

From that premise, the high calibre speakers rooted their presentations in ‘person-centred approaches’ which clearly connected with the hunger for understanding of those working in residential care. The wide range of topics covered clinical, legal, community and social perspectives at the cutting edge of our understanding of this complex area.  The conference challenged the assumptions many hold about the experience of those with Dementia and how to care for them.

The key note speaker was Professor Jan Dewing and she asked those present to reject the popular ‘catastrophising’ of Dementia and to consider it as another way of being human. She talked about the concept of ‘time travel’ as helpful when relating to people with Dementia and rightly saw the role of caregivers as ‘holders and instillers of hope’.   Her positive approach to ‘living well with Dementia’ was echoed in all presentations including that of Ms. Eileen O’Keeffe, a Clinical Nurse Manager in St. Luke’s Home, whose talk on ‘expressing sexuality in residential Dementia care’ provoked much discussion and again challenged participants to consider the person experiencing Dementia in the fullness of their identity and dignity.

Guests at the SLH Annual Conference were Dr Cillian Twomey (Geriatrician), Carol Jermyn (Solicitor Ronan Daly Jermyn), Prof Jan Dewing (key note speaker and Sue Pembry Chair in Nursing Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh), with Dr Paul Colton (Chairman of the Board of Directors of SLH).  Photo:  Gerard McCarhty.

Guests at the SLH Annual Conference were Dr Cillian Twomey (Geriatrician), Carol Jermyn (Solicitor Ronan Daly Jermyn), Prof Jan Dewing (key note speaker and Sue Pembry Chair in Nursing Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh), with Dr Paul Colton (Chairman of the Board of Directors of SLH). Photo: Gerard McCarthy.

A series of masterclasses  followed the conference the next day.  These continued the practical learning, discussion and debate. Delegates shared their enthusiasm for the conference describing it as ‘enlightening’, ‘really beneficial’ and an opportunity for ‘networking’ and ‘sharing experience’.

The Reverend Sarah Marry, the new Chaplain to Saint Luke’s Home, was present on one of her first days in her new role.  She said:

As the new Chaplain to St. Luke’s Home, I was delighted to be part of this ground breaking event and was encouraged by the commitment, enthusiasm and compassion of those working in residential care who help our loved ones to ‘live well with Dementia’.

The 2016 Conference will be on Thursday, 21st April when the keynote speaker will be Professor Brendan McCormack, Head of Division of Nursing, Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh.  There will again be masterclasses on the following day, Friday, 22nd April. Book early to avoid disappointment!

 

 

Posted in Charities in the Diocese, Church in Society, Community Involvement, Contemporary Issues, Diocese, Education, Healthcare Ministry, People in Need, Saint Luke's Home, Saint Luke's Home Education Centre | Comments Off on ‘Living Well with Dementia’ ~ Conference hosted by Saint Luke’s Home Education Centre in Cork

St Anne’s, Shandon, Cork Will Host Service for IDAHOT Day

A Church Service for IDAHOT DAY will be hosted by the parish of Saint Anne’s Church, Shandon, Cork at 10.30 a.m. on Sunday, 17th May.  That day is also the date of the 2015 annual International Day Against Homophobia and Transphobia (IDAHOT). The Service will be conducted by the Priest-in-Charge the Reverend Sarah Marry.  Cork’s LGBT Inclusive Choir – Choral ConFusion – will sing at the Service.  This will mark the conclusion also of the 2015 Cork LGBT Awareness Week.  All are welcome to attend.

St Anne's Church, Shandon, Cork

St Anne’s Church, Shandon, Cork

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Bishop of Cork Attends Launch of Cork LGBT Awareness Week 2015

On Monday 11th May, the Bishop of Cork, the Right Reverend Dr Paul Colton attended the launch, in Cork City Hall, of the 2015 Cork LGBT Awareness week.  The speakers this year included the Deputy Lord Mayor of Cork, Cllr Kenneth O’Flynn, Chief Superintendent Mick O’Flynn of An Garda Síochána, and this year’s guest of honour, Valerie Mulcahy, of the Cork Ladies’ Football team.

At the launch of Cork LGBT Awareness Week 2015 were (l-r)  Chief Superintendent Mick Finn, Valerie Mulcahy, and Bishop Paul Colton

At the launch of Cork LGBT Awareness Week 2015 were (l-r) Chief Superintendent Mick Finn, Valerie Mulcahy, and Bishop Paul Colton

Cork LGBT Awareness Week is organised to acknowledge and demonstrate that LGBT individuals are family members, community residents, constituents, citizens, visitors, service users and service providers. The purpose of the week is to advance Objective 86 of the Cork City Plan: “The gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender communities will be enabled to fully participate in the social, cultural and economic life of Cork City.”

LGBT Awareness Week is supported by an inter-agency group made up of: Cork City Council, HSE South, Cork ETB, Dept. of Social Protection, An Garda Siochána, Cork City Partnership, LINC, Gay Community Development, Cork Trans Support Group, Ballyphehane Togher CDP and Sexual Health Centre.

Bishop Colton said:

This is a week organised by our partner groups in civic society in Cork.  I’m glad to support to support these partners, not least because the week also aims to tackle the homophobia that still, shockingly, exists in our society.  In addition, it is important, from a Christian perspective, to acknowledge that many LGBT people are also people of faith, taking part to the full in the life of our churches, as they have been for centuries; they make a significant contribution in our spiritual and religious life.  More generally, as a Church, we want to affirm that our doors are open to all people, whoever they are, and wherever they are on their journey of faith.

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Cork, Cloyne and Ross at the General Synod of the Church of Ireland, 2015

Like Church of Ireland members from around Ireland, representatives of the United Dioceses of Cork, Cloyne and Ross attended the General Synod of the Church of Ireland which was held in Armagh last week on the 7th, 8th and 9th May.  Our Diocesan Media Officer, Sam Wynn, was busy taking photographs.  Here are some of them:

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Evensong in Cork Parish Marks Centenary of Sinking of RMS Lusitania

Saint John’s Church, Monkstown, County Cork (in the Church of Ireland Parish of Carrigaline Union) overlooks Cork Harbour.  It has a spectacular vista of Great Island (where Cobh, known as Queenstown in 1915 and central to the responses to the sinking of RMS Lusitania), and a view also of the comings and goings today to and from the Port of Cork.  The National Maritime College of Ireland (NMCI) is also situated in the parish and the rector, the Reverend Elaine Murray, is Church of Ireland Chaplain.

The Reverend Elaine Murray (centre), Rector of Carrigaline Union and Church of Ireland Chaplain to the National Maritime College of Ireland, with Officers and Cadets who attended the RMS Lusitania centenary commemoration  in St John's Church, Monkstown, County Cork.

The Reverend Elaine Murray (centre), Rector of Carrigaline Union and Church of Ireland Chaplain to the National Maritime College of Ireland, with Officers and Cadets who attended the RMS Lusitania centenary commemoration in St John’s Church, Monkstown, County Cork.

It was appropriate, therefore, that Officers and Cadets of the NMCI attended a poignant Choral Evensong in St John’s Church on Sunday 10th May 2015 to mark the centenary of the sinking, on 7th May 1915, of RMS Lusitania. Gerard Horan of NMCI spoke very movingly of what is known about the lives of some of the survivors of the sinking.

Meanwhile on 7th May in the Parish of St Luke, Douglas, Cork, schoolchildren from St Luke’s National School visited the Church on the centenary itself to see the memorial to a former parishioner Sir Hugh Lane, who died when RMS Lusitania was sunk.  Hugh Lane was an Irish art collector who founded the Dublin Municipal Gallery of Modern Art (the first known gallery of modern art in the world).

Commemorations were held in many of the affected coastal towns, villages and parishes of the United Dioceses of Cork, Cloyne and Ross.  An oar washed ashore from one of the lifeboats of RMS Lusitania hangs in the Church of St Barrahane, Castletownshend, County Cork.

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