The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Revealed: How Captain Tom’s £33 MILLION was shared out

- By Michael Powell

FROM the provision of ‘wobble rooms’ and wellbeing gardens, to lung monitors and iPads – the legacy of Captain Sir Tom Moore’s inspiratio­nal charity walk can be revealed today.

The £33 million raised by the war veteran, who turned 100 in April, has helped to improve the lives of hundreds of thousands of NHS workers and their patients.

Combined with a further £120million donated by the public to NHS Charities Together, the organisati­on that benefited from Captain Tom’s generosity, spending has been focused on supporting those people denied visits from loved ones and to tackling the mental health cost of the pandemic.

It includes thousands of iPads to allow patients to keep in touch with relatives, and counsellin­g sessions for NHS staff cut off from their families as they battle Covid-19 on the front line.

Children at Great Ormond Street Hospital in London received packs of arts and crafts materials, puzzle books and games thanks to a £20,000 grant.

Play specialist Florence Prince said: ‘It was such a great feeling to hand these out to patients to help them keep boredom at bay and keep smiling.’

Nurses and doctors have received care packs containing hand cream, lip balm, energy snacks, refreshmen­ts, car chargers and headphones, while socalled ‘wobble rooms’, kitted out with comfortabl­e sofas, a kettle and artwork from children, have been created to allow shattered health workers a few minutes of peace.

Airedale Hospital in West Yorkshire is one of the sites for a wellbeing garden where medics can escape the stress of crammed wards.

‘It is a lovely place to go, take your PPE off and get out of that very stressful environmen­t,’ said matron Angela McGarry. ‘I lost my father to Covid in April and I wish the garden had been there then for me to sit and reflect in.’ Joseph Lomax, 16, is one of hundreds with the respirator­y condition cystic fibrosis who have been given a lung monitor to keep track of their condition from home. The handheld device, which monitors lung capacity, means the teenager does not have to make a 120-mile round-trip from his home in Northampto­n to see specialist­s in Oxford.

‘It took away a lot of worry and it meant we could… keep safe while I was shielding,’ he said.

His mother Mandy added: ‘It was an absolute godsend.’ About £110 million of the more than £150million raised by NHS Charities Together and Captain Tom has so far been pledged to more than 225 hospital charities.

Before the centenaria­n’s decision on April 6 to complete 100 laps of the garden at his home in Bedfordshi­re, NHS Charities Together had three employees – now it has 17.

‘We have been blown away by the public’s response to our Covid campaign and will be forever grateful to Captain Tom Moore,’ said group chief executive Ellie Orton. ‘He proved that, no matter what age you are, you can make a difference.’

The charity does not aim to replace Government funding for the NHS, but to enhance care for patients and staff.

‘We want to make sure the money goes on to have a long-lasting legacy,’ Ms Orton added. ‘That is why we have focused on things like mental health because if the NHS workforce is happier, that will undoubtedl­y improve patient care and the experience for everyone.

‘Our heroes in the NHS have looked after us, so now we must look after them.’

Captain Tom was knighted by the Queen in July and he has since released an autobiogra­phy. He was also awarded GQ’s Inspiratio­n of the Year award after becoming the magazine’s oldest ever cover star.

‘Whatever your age, you can make a difference’

 ??  ?? inspiRAtio­n: Captain Sir Tom Moore at GQ’s Men of the Year awards
inspiRAtio­n: Captain Sir Tom Moore at GQ’s Men of the Year awards

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