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Communication and kindness: Using my voice as a consumer and carer

By Deb Letica, consumer representative

Life is an interesting journey that unfolds before us, sometimes leading us to opportunities that we never considered.

I have mostly enjoyed a good quality of health so far. It was not until I had some health issues such as Graves’ Disease, over prescribed thyroid medication, emergency appendicitis and discovering my much-loved younger brother had a rare genetic neurogenetic disease called a leukodystrophy that I became passionate about health.

My lived experience motivated me to become involved in the health sector, starting out as a member of the Consumer Advisory Council at my local hospital.

I attended Health Consumers’ Council consumer training to understand how the health system works and why my voice as a consumer/carer was important. I learnt how to use my experience to have a strong voice for systemic improvement in the health system.

From those small beginnings I have grown in confidence and contribute in a systemic way at a state level with the Department of Health (DoH), South Metropolitan Health Service (SMHS), and WA Primary Health Alliance (WAPHA), and on a national level in training health professionals.

I’ve learnt how the systems operate, the rigorous safety and quality standards, the NSQHC Standards, accreditation of our hospitals, and the importance of training our health professionals of the future. On a personal level I’ve learned how to better navigate the sector, how to advocate on my own behalf and on the behalf of people I care about.

Integrated care is important to me. I think that many vulnerable people fall through the gaps when they are the ones that can teach us so much more. Even when we are diagnosed with a chronic health issue trying to navigate the two systems when you’re not feeling too well can be overwhelming. In fact, it was a complete surprise to me to discover that integrated care wasn’t the norm!

Communication is one area that needs improving when it comes to consumer engagement. Consumers/carers just want CARE (Communicate, Access, Respect, Experience) for a good patient experience. The key to enabling this to happen is kindness. Kindness enables conversations to happen about things that matter to us, what’s important to us. Put us at the centre of the care team and please all communicate with each other!

Kindness doesn’t cost anything, but it can make a profound difference to others. It gives consumers and carers the confidence to ask questions, increase their understanding and health literacy, and it makes them partners in the planning of their care.

Kindness is life changing – it builds trust which then builds collaboration and partnerships. Kindness builds teams which then increases patient safety. It breaks down barriers and changes mindsets.

Kindness is the enabler for everything that matters to each of us.

I strongly encourage everyone to become involved in the health sector as a consumer/carer rep.  It’s important to give back to our community, to make the world a better place for us all.

Deb Letica is in a hopsital room, holding a file and speaking to another woman

Photo of Deb Letica by SMHS

*This article was originally published in Health Matters 

Patient Experience Week 2018

Patient Experience Week is a global event to celebrate the people who impact on the patient experience every day. It is held in the last week of April each year. This is our third year of running Patient Experience Week, and we are mixing things up a little. Instead of holding all the events in April, we held three events in April and will hold a fourth in November. We want to ensure that Patient Experience is not just a day, but a movement!

The uniting theme is kindness. Our 2018 Patient Experience logo references fabric. Fabrics come in all kinds of textures and colours, thicknesses and patterns. Some are traditional, others are contemporary. Some are as delicate as gauze while others are hard wearing and durable. Weaving is an integral part of fabric and we see our society as being woven together through our engagement with each other. Each engagement provides an opportunity to weave our fabric more strongly and more beautifully and to create a society where the warp and the weft continue to hold each other together.

APRIL PATIENT EXPERIENCE WEEK WRAP-UP –

See also our special Patient Experience edition of Week Health Matters

…and stay tuned for videos, audios and photos courtesy of our kind volunteers, Hope and Robert Klienfelder. We will post them once they are edited and good to go.

Beyond the Stethoscope

Friday April 27th, 7-9am

HCC partnered with Child and Adolescent Health Service and the WA Primary Health Alliance to host a Patient Experience Week Breakfast. This event brought together clinicians, health professionals, consumers, carers and community to hear from Lucy Mayes, the author of Beyond the Stethoscope.

Gathering of Kindness

Friday April 27th, 9.30-1.30

HCC and Child and Adolescent Health Service celebrated Patient Experience Week with a mini-Gathering of Kindness. Dr Catherine Crock from the Hush Foundation, and co-founder of the Gathering of Kindness attended via video-conference.  Lucy Mayes, Patient Opinion’s Michael Greco, and World Kindness Day’s Michael Lloyd Wright convened a through provoking panel discussion on what could we do to create a kinder health system.

Health Consumers Council Excellence Awards

Friday April 27th 2-4pm

We closed out the day with the announcement of our Health Consumer Excllence Awards.

Tuesday 13th November 2018 – Achieving Equity in the Patient Journey 

On Tuesday 13th November 2018, World Kindness Day,  we held a special event with a focus on achieving equity in the patient journey for people from new and emerging communities and those for whom English is not a first (or second, or third) language.

Patient Experience Week 2018

World Kindness Day, November 13

Patient Experience Week is a global event to celebrate the people who impact on the patient experience every day. It is held in the last week of April each year. This is our third year of running Patient Experience Week, and we are mixing things up a little. HCC, in partnership with WA Primary Health Alliance, Ethnic Communities Council of WA and Multicultural Services Centre, held a special World Kindness Day event on 13th November. It is part of HCC’s Patient Experience Week events for 2018.

This partnership World Kindness Day event aims to promote a culture of kindness as a vehicle to deliver a more equitable healthcare. Kindness plays a huge role in improving the patient experience, thus improving health outcomes. This event focuses on Culturally and Linguistically Diverse (CALD)  members of our community who experience many barriers in accessing health services.

Health service providers and health consumers need to have a shared understanding of what kindness means in healthcare. The act of kindness can look different to people of non-English speaking backgrounds. Health service providers from the public, private and non-government sector including interested community members are invited to the event.

April 2018 Events Summary

The uniting theme across all our Patient Experience Week 2018 events is kindness. Our 2018 Patient Experience logo references fabric. Fabrics come in all kinds of textures and colours, thicknesses and patterns. Some are traditional, others are contemporary. Some are as delicate as gauze while others are hard wearing and durable. Weaving is an integral part of fabric and we see our society as being woven together through our engagement with each other. Each engagement provides an opportunity to weave our fabric more strongly and more beautifully and to create a society where the warp and the weft continue to hold each other together.

Beyond the Stethoscope

Friday April 27th 2018, 7-9am

HCC partnered with Child and Adolescent Health Service and the WA Primary Health Alliance to host a Patient Experience Week Breakfast. This event brought together clinicians, health professionals, consumers, carers and community to hear from Lucy Mayes, the author of Beyond the Stethoscope.

Gathering of Kindness

Friday April 27th 2018, 9.30-1.30

HCC and Child and Adolescent Health Service celebrated Patient Experience Week with a mini-Gathering of Kindness. Dr Catherine Crock from the Hush Foundation, and co-founder of the Gathering of Kindness attended via video-conference.  Lucy Mayes, Patient Opinion’s Michael Greco, and World Kindness Day’s Michael Lloyd Wright convened a through provoking panel discussion on what could we do to create a kinder health system.

 

Health Consumers Council Excellence Awards

Friday April 27th 2018, 2-4pm

We closed out the day with the announcement of our Health Consumer Excellence Awards.

 

Compassionate Care Award 2017

Compassionate Care Award

This award is to acknowledge people providing direct patient care who demonstrate compassion. We are looking for compassionate individuals working in any capacity in the health service or organisation. We are also looking for compassionate teams of health care providers who demonstrate effective multi-disciplinary care.

 

And the Winner is…

Pictured from left to right: Hon. Alanna Clohesy, Fatima Edward and Karen Bradley.

Fatima Edward

Fatima is an Assistant in Nursing (AIN) in acute geriatrics and subacute ortho-geriatric care at Royal Perth Hospital. Fatima consistently receives positive feedback from both her patients and her colleagues. Fatima cares for a lot of patients experiencing delirium or dementia and she strives to provide these patients with a high standard of care, maintaining their dignity and rights whenever possible. Fatima has a calm and caring approach to her patients, which sets them at ease. She acknowledges the patient as an individual, and often finds out what their personal interests are, so she can better engage with them.

Fatima has been nominated for this award for demonstrating an ongoing commitment to compassionate care by consistently going above and beyond her duties. “Many nursing staff on the ward have noted that shifts often run smoothly when Fatima is on duty. She helps out wherever she can, and we are constantly impressed by her ability to seemingly be everywhere to lend a hand. Fatima ensures that patients requiring special attention are never left unattended.”

 

Finalists are…

Kim Ashton

Kim was born in Perth in 1982. He lived in Perth until he turned 20, when he decided to joined the Army. Kim spent the following 11 years with the Army travelling the world. After leaving the Army 2013 his passion for fitness and working with people led him to become a Personal Trainer. While training people he also ran his own business as a handyman and landscaper. In November 2015, he was told about a job available as a Security Officer in the Health Services. In July 2016, he began working as a Security Officer and has enjoyed every minute of it. Having the opportunity to work with a variety of people including doctors, nurses, mental health patients, every day patients, elderly people and the general public, is and will always be a pleasure.

 

Kim has been nominated for this award for going out of his way to assist a carer and her mother while visiting Sir Charles Gardiner Hospital. “His kindness moved me to tears. My mother was also equally touched at Kim’s spontaneous gesture of care, kindness and compassion. It made our day!!! It took three weeks to track down Kim so I could nominate him for this award.”

How you can help support quality healthcare for all

For some time, I have been thinking about people across the globe that access healthcare (health consumers). Unfortunately, most are not able to access the same quality of healthcare available in Australia. I wondered how we in the ‘Lucky Country’ could share our good fortune with others and help support quality healthcare for all.

 

Help support quality healthcare for all

To help support quality healthcare for all health consumers, Health Consumers’ Council will nominate each year a selected healthcare charity organisation located in Australia and overseas. We will provide those who attend our functions the opportunity to donate a gold coin go towards the nominated ‘good cause’. We hope you will support us in this endeavour to help improve healthcare for those less fortunate than ourselves.

 

Hamlin Fistula Ethiopia

In 2017 we are collecting donations for ‘Hamlin Fistula Ethiopia’. ‘Hamlin Fistula Ethiopia’ was founded in 1974 by husband and wife, Dr Reg Hamlin OBE and Dr Catherine Hamlin AC. I first came across the ‘Hamlin Fistula Ethiopia’ in the 1990s and have since read more about it, including in the book, ‘The Hospital by the River’, by Dr Catherine Hamlin. (Pictured: Catherine Hamlin Co-founder of Hamlin Fistula Ethiopia)

 

Catherine and her late husband Reg initially travelled to Ethiopia (as doctors) with the intent of staying for three years. Originally from Australia they dedicated their lives to the women of Ethiopia. Dr Catherine Hamlin turned 97 in January and she still lives in her home in the grounds of the Adis Ababa Fistula Hospital.

 

Catherine and Reg are part of my collection of heroes, people I admire for the contribution they have made to the lives of others and therefore the world. Today we constantly look at life through the media lens, making the world seem almost devoid of genuine acts of kindness. So, it is even more important to recognise genuine heroes like Catherine and Reg.

 

The Hamelin Clinic also has an office in New South Wales and I encourage you to visit their website here to learn more about this wonderful couple, their staff and women the Clinic heals.

 

Louise Ford | Consumer & Community Engagement Manager