Western Mail

Hospital tearoom and hair salon is a cut above

Dementia can be frightenin­g, disorienta­ting and affect a patient’s quality of life. However, one community hospital has found new and innovative ways of helping people live more comfortabl­y with the condition...

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Women with dementia can visit their very own hair salon before enjoying afternoon tea – thanks to imaginativ­e staff on a hospital ward.

Staff at Cefn Coed Hospital’s Onnen Ward in Swansea have recreated a hair salon and tearoom, called Serenity, in a bid to enhance the care given to their patients.

It is claimed visits to the facilities often help calm patients and help bring back memories.

Clinical lead Deborah Morgan said: “The reason we have done this is for the ladies to think that they are actually going out for an appointmen­t to have their hair done.

“We based it upon an old fashioned design, and there is also a tearoom opposite so they can go and have tea and cake afterwards.

“The staff do their hair and nails as part of our activities, it’s all part of their personal care, but we also have a hairdresse­r who is based in Cefn Coed and she uses the salon to cut hair now.”

The tearoom in particular has proved a real resource in enhancing patient care.

Deborah said: “If they do get distressed over anything, instead of giving them extra medication, a visit to the salon and tearoom can help calm them down.

“We also had a husband and wife visit the tearoom for a meal. She is a patient who wasn’t eating very well so we asked her husband to come along and we made it appear that they were going out for a meal together.

“It worked as she ate a lot better with him sitting with her.”

Onnen Ward manager Helen Hall added: “The patients love coming to the tea shop, thinking they have an appointmen­t to have their hair done at the same time.

“We have a few old magazines which they like to look at and reminisce with.

“We have tried to capture what a tea shop would have looked like when the patients would have gone out and visited them. We also encourage them to help make the cakes beforehand.

“A lot of the patients who have dementia are unable to communicat­e or do a lot of activities, but they respond well just by coming into this kind of scenario where they have the old fashioned cups and saucers. The really do appear to enjoy coming here.”

Swansea Sound radio presenter and pantomime star Kev Johns, who cut the ribbon at Serenity’s official opening, said: “What a fantastic idea. I think it’s wonderful and the staff here are amazing, everybody is happy and it’s a beautiful environmen­t with a fine afternoon tea that I’m looking forwards to.

“This will take people back to their younger days and help them remember those wonderful tearooms.

“The ladies are also of a generation where they like to have their hair done on a regular basis. They don’t have much done to it but they go once a week.”

 ??  ?? > Radio presenter Kev Johns with healthcare support worker Ceri Brian and patient Pauline Austin at the new salon on Onnen ward, Cefn Coed Hospital
> Radio presenter Kev Johns with healthcare support worker Ceri Brian and patient Pauline Austin at the new salon on Onnen ward, Cefn Coed Hospital
 ??  ?? > Kev Johns and staff enjoy a spot of high tea with Pauline Austin and Julia Donne on Onnen ward
> Kev Johns and staff enjoy a spot of high tea with Pauline Austin and Julia Donne on Onnen ward

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