About

Our project has 2 parts:

Part I - Education and Immersion.

6 x weekly x 90 minute sessions at Gibson Unit, Calvary St John's Palliative Care and Oncology Unit.

Each session has an education component, activity with Calvary staff and/or patients and a reflective de-brief. Starts February 18th.

Part II - Creative Response.

All participants, including adults will be asked to create a personal response to their experiences in Part I. It could be a piece of visual art, music, poem. Whatever takes their fancy!

The short term aim of this exciting pilot project is to educate and journey with Senior students from a class at St Mary’s College and Guilford Young College about Palliative and End of Life Care in the hospital setting.

The long term aim is to enhance our communites capacity to deal with death and dying in a more positive way and in so doing be able to support others who approaching and reaching the end of life. We also hope that the program will enhance the participants capacicity to personally live more "fully human, fully alive" lives.

Calvary staff, doctors, community members and organisations will be sharing their expertise about end of life care issues as well as their own stories and experiences with the participants.

At the conclusion of the 6 weeks, students and staff will respond by creating a personal response to their experiences. These responses will be shared with both the community of St Mary’s and Guildford Young College, the community of Calvary and the wider community. Response(s) could take the form of music, poetry, presentation, film, visual art.

Calvary plans to document and research the program. We also want to create our own response in the form of a short film (7-10 minutes) which will be shared at the conclusion of the course and be used as an education tool about Calvary and how we provide dignified pallitiave and end of life care for people as they are approaching and reaching the end of their life. Our vision is holistice health care which places people and their goals of care at the centre of their web of care.

The project is being funded by Calvary Hobart and Palliative Care Tasmania. The effectivenesss of the program will be evaluated as part of an approved Calvary Hobart research project.

At Calvary Hobart our vision as a Catholic not-for-profit hospital is to excel and be recognised as a continuing source of healing, hope and nurturing to the people and communities we serve. We believe that this project will help us live this vision in a creative and new way. Our values of hospitality, healing, stewardship and respect are the inspiration and foundation of this project.



8 Apr 2016

PART II - Unlocking our creativity

Yesterday we had a 2 hour session about unlocking our creativeness in order to  help us develop a response to our learnings from Part I. I think we are all a little apprehensive about what we need to do particularly those of us, like me who don't feel they are creative. Bradfield was great in leading  this process and the session at St Mary's and helped us to free up our thinking.

I hope by the end of yesterday everyone felt that the "response" didn't have to be a burden and that we could instead, see it as a personal way to process our experience at Calvary St John's. I hope you enjoy this aspect. Please email me with any questions or concerns.
THANKS

No comments:

Post a Comment