Sunderland Echo

Hospital room to allow families to say goodbye

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A special spaces has been created in a hospital to allow families to be comforted as they lose a loved one.

The emergency care and end of life at South Tyneside andSunderl­andNHSFoun­dation Trust teams have worked together to create the suite in the emergency department of Sunderland Royal Hospital, offering a private area for families to say their final goodbyes to loved ones away from the busy department.

The room, which has been fitted out with comfortabl­e furniture, quiet music and reed diffusers donated by members of the public, is already in use and has also helped create a a haven by staff when they have faced a tough shift.

The room includes artwork from retired nurse Derrick Johnson and an iconic photo of a rainbow over the hospital, which was taken at the beginning of the pandemic by a member of staff.

Emergency Department Junior Sister Lesley Young, who has led the project, said: “The Emergency Department sees some of our sickest patients, many of which will have taken ill quite quickly or have experience­d some kind of sudden trauma, such as a car accident or fall.

“Covid-19 has meant that many families have not been able to be with their loved ones when they have had to come into hospital and this can greatly add to their distress, especially when the patient is very poorly or deteriorat­es quickly.

“Bringing families together at end of life and in such exceptiona­l circumstan­ces is something we have always tried to do, but we wanted to do more to make sure they could spend those precious last moments together in a safe and comfortabl­e space away from clinical areas.”

 ??  ?? Emergency Department Junior Sister Lesley Young.
Emergency Department Junior Sister Lesley Young.

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