The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

PASSING OF THE BATON

Michael Alexander speaks to Dr Pat Carragher who is retiring as medical director at Children’s Hospices Across Scotland (Chas) after dedicating his working life to helping children with life-limiting illnesses

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When Dr Pat Carragher’s son Andrew died of sudden infant death syndrome (cot death) in 1990, aged just four months old, he experience­d at first hand the pain of losing a child. In those days, there was no organised support to help him or his family pick up the pieces.

More than three decades later, and as a doctor with 40 years’ medical experience,

26 of them dedicated to Children’s Hospices Across Scotland (Chas), he sees every day what a critical role a children’s palliative care team can provide.

The teams support not only a child whose life is cut short but their wider family too. Dr Carragher does not specifical­ly work with parents who have suffered a cot death.

However, as the father of three other now grown-up sons prepares to retire from his post as medical director at Chas this summer, he says the loss of his own child has been one of his motivation­s for helping improve support for families who have a child with a life-shortening condition.

He says: “I’ve never advertised it, but I think the death of Andrew gave me some insight and empathy into family situations – it gave me considerab­le insight into some of the challenges that families met – but it didn’t mean to say that I understood other families’ situations. Each situation is unique!”

Dr Carragher joined Chas in 1996 on a part-time basis. Over the last 26 years, he has helped develop palliative care for families across Scotland who have children in need of hospice care.

By this summer, the Dundee University medicine graduate will notch up 40 years as a doctor.

Before Chas he worked in hospital and general practice posts – his work with the charity has been full-time since 2006.

As the 63-year-old grandfathe­r passes the medical director baton over to a new team of dedicated health profession­als, Dr Carragher sat down with The Courier to reflect on his career and talk about the “privilege” of working and walking with children and

families as part of the Chas team which has supported them.

Brought up near Liverpool, he came to Scotland in 1977 to study medicine in Dundee. After qualifying from Ninewells Hospital Medical School in 1982, he took on various house jobs and junior doctor jobs in Tayside.

In 1987, he settled in Kinross as a GP with his young family and then wife. When Andrew died in 1990, he was GP principal at Loch Leven Health Centre.

This was before the establishm­ent of Chas, which, in 1992, was formed by a group of profession­als and parents of Scottish children with life-shortening conditions who had travelled to England for hospice care.

At that time, Chas stood for Children Hospice Associatio­n Scotland, later changing its name to Children’s Hospices Across Scotland.

Work to build Rachel House, Scotland’s first children’s hospice, started at Kinross in December 1994. It was through this “accident of geography”, however – as a local GP who agreed to provide out of hours cover – that Dr Carragher also became a supporter.

When the hospice was opened in March 1996 by The Princess Royal, he became one of its medical directors. As the charity expanded, Dr Carragher carried on as a GP.

By the time a second children’s hospice – Robin House at Balloch – opened in 2005, however, he could see it was becoming increasing­ly difficult to combine life as a GP with life as a hospice officer covering both.

Having completed a diploma in palliative medicine (paediatric option) in 2002-2003 from the University of Wales College of Medicine (now Cardiff University), he successful­ly applied for the first medical director’s job at Chas in 2006.

In turn he “gave up being a GP” which had taught him so much.

Over the years the service has grown. In 2008, they formally launched Chas at Home where care is taken to children’s houses. The numbers of children using the service has expanded across Scotland, including Tayside, Fife and Grampian.

Significan­tly, however, the complexity of care has also increased.

He says: “We have seen enormous changes in the last 16 years – the sort of youngsters we are looking after are very different than in those days.

“Much of our work in the early days was with youngsters who were quite stable, but we have followed the growth and the complexity in paediatric­s. Children with severe disease can now survive for a lot longer with interventi­ons. We’ve seen it become more and more complex. So many of the children who perhaps would have died in hospital 10-15 years ago now survive for longer, but there comes a time when their care and their deteriorat­ion becomes so complicate­d that actually continuati­on of life is problemati­c for them and their parents, who have often dedicated much of their lives to the care of these youngsters.”

Dr Carragher explains that increasing­ly work is now done within children’s hospitals across Scotland including Ninewells, the Victoria Hospital in Kirkcaldy and

the Royal Aberdeen Children’s Hospital. Numbers of users are increasing thanks to the generosity of the Scottish public and increasing funding from Scottish Government. Users are now at more than 400 per year, including bereavemen­t work.

When the Covid-19 pandemic hit in March 2020, however, they had to provide a very different service. The model of care was

adapted to increase the use of Chas at Home and the world’s first virtual children’s hospice was created.

“Before the pandemic we had eight beds both in Rachel House and Robin House and we were offering five or six of those for short plan breaks, previously known as respite, and two for emergency admissions,” he says.

“That could be for everything from breakdown of care package at home to endof-life care to symptom management, but through the regulation­s that came in through Health Protection Scotland in the spring of 2020, we had to start offering zonal nursing in both houses, that allowed us at most three children in each house. We took the respite care we had been giving on an in-patient basis and increased that to Chas at Home.

“We did a heck of a lot on Teams, Zoom – whatever platform people needed.

“We brought a lot of things into people’s houses because even if they could have gone out, they didn’t want to because they had children who were pretty vulnerable.

“They were choosing, understand­ably, to socially isolate themselves to protect them from the virus and other viruses.”

The previous service has been gradually re-opening as they begin to move out of the restrictio­ns caused by the Covid-19 pandemic.

Significan­tly, however, there have also been new medical appointmen­ts in Chas, a significan­t increase in advanced nurse practition­ers (ANPs) and pharmacist­s as well as a full complement of nurses, family support workers, chaplains and social workers.

As he retires, and having recently been voted Employee of the Year at the Scottish Charity Awards, he’s delighted there’s a sustainabl­e plan and very experience­d clinicians to “pass the baton onto”, including new medical director Annabel Howell.

Underlying all of this, he says, is an “absolute passion” to offer an excellent childcentr­ed family-focused service for families, and to increase the numbers to reach more than the one-in-three children who die with palliative care needs.

“The death of a child has serious and lasting effects on parents and other family members, effectivel­y for the rest of their lives,”

adds Dr Carragher, who is undertakin­g four gruelling challenges, totalling 64 miles of running and hiking, to mark his retirement (www.justgiving.com/team/DrPat).

“Any attempt to reduce symptoms and improve quality of life in the final days or weeks must not only be good for that child but, in the fullness of time, be helpful to those left behind.

“It’s been a privilege to work with families at an incredibly close quarter dealing with the things that are the most precious in their life.

“It’s with sadness that I’m leaving Chas, but there’s a new batch of people coming through who will do an even better job because there are more of them, we’re going to reach more and more families.

“I’m really confident Chas will reach more and more families going forward because sadly the need for children’s palliative care

is not reducing.”

THE DEATH OF A CHILD HAS SERIOUS AND LASTING EFFECTS ON PARENTS AND FAMILY MEMBERS

 ?? ?? STANDING DOWN: Dr Pat Carragher, outgoing medical director at Chas.
STANDING DOWN: Dr Pat Carragher, outgoing medical director at Chas.
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 ?? ?? James Dodson, seven, from Edinburgh, above, at a sci-fi themed fundraiser for Chas, while below right Dr Carragher accepts a cheque on behalf of Chas, and below left is Blake McMillan and mum Jenny.
James Dodson, seven, from Edinburgh, above, at a sci-fi themed fundraiser for Chas, while below right Dr Carragher accepts a cheque on behalf of Chas, and below left is Blake McMillan and mum Jenny.

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