Yorkshire Post

Care home ‘pen pals’ are a lifeline for elderly residents

A Yorkshire care home has come up with a novel approach to stop its residents feeling isolated during lockdown.

- Sarah Wilson reports

BY THE time a national UK lockdown was called on March 23, Fulford Care Home in York had already tightened restrictio­ns, closing its doors two weeks earlier in a bid to shield residents from coronaviru­s.

With old age being a high-risk factor for Covid-19, the decision to isolate elderly residents and pause visits might have been sensible, but it certainly wasn’t easy, says care home director Elizabeth Hancock.

“We spend all our time trying not to isolate our residents. It’s one of our key objectives, and suddenly we’re trying to isolate them, it goes against everything we try to do and that’s hard.”

Faced with the reality that residents could be without outside contact for weeks, even months, Elizabeth was struck with a simple idea to mitigate the impact: bringing the “outside in” by asking local people to write letters to the home’s isolated residents.

Within hours of posting a simple message on a couple of local Facebook groups, Elizabeth’s message garnered hundreds of shares. Within days, letters began flying in from local schools, nurseries and residents, followed by cakes, gifts and produce from local businesses.

Emails arrived from all over the world, Easter eggs and other treats were dropped on the doorstep and handwritte­n post came through the door from places as far-flung as France and the Netherland­s. Elizabeth now estimates that the home is averaging 80 letters a day.

“The response has been huge – cakes, flowers, local shops dropping off stock.”

In order to minimise any risk of viral transmissi­on, staff are “isolating” letters for several days as a precaution­ary measure, before distributi­ng them among the home’s 28 residents.

The impact of the post on residents, she says, has been incredibly moving.

“My great aunt lives with us, she’s usually my biggest critic, and even she said ‘Lizzie can I have some paper and envelopes, I want to write back’.”

Some of the home’s residents are no longer able to read the letters for themselves, yet the post is still reaching them in other ways.

“We’ve got one lady with dementia – she used to be a school teacher. The other day she received a picture of two children and their dog, and she loves children and dogs. She was sat stroking the letter and talking to it all afternoon. I saw her the other day, too, someone had given her one of her letters, and I know she can’t actually read that letter. But to her, she was reading that letter. She spent the whole afternoon folding it up and opening it to look again”.

Far from stopping at a single letter, many writers have now struck up regular pen pal correspond­ence with residents who were mere strangers a few weeks ago. It’s correspond­ence that Elizabeth believes has reciprocal benefits during a time when so many people are struggling with anxiety.

In her original call-out on Facebook, Elizabeth listed (with permission) the first names of every resident in the home, asking any potential letterwrit­ers to pick a name and send a personal letter addressed to them.

In response, several letterwrit­ers have nominated residents who share names with deceased friends and relatives. It’s helping people go beyond a simple gesture to actually “make an emotional connection with the residents”, says Elizabeth.

And though she jokes that her staff “could kill” her over the volume of post they’ve had to sort through, Elizabeth says she’s seen “a huge difference as well in the morale of the staff ”.

The lockdown has also brought another blessing in disguise to the home, with staff now having more free time to spend with residents. More time to have quality chats, says Elizabeth, is crucial during a time of such uncertaint­y.

She hopes that the end of lockdown will present a wider chance for the public to reflect on the isolation that elderly people often suffer even during times of normality.

“When we can go to the pub and meet, I just hope there’ll be a certain amount of people who think that there are a lot of older people who live like we did all the time. And maybe we should just create some good habits to carry on.”

She said it’s not just the elderly who suffer from isolation. Though naturally exacerbate­d by new social distancing rules, loneliness is a problem endemic across age groups, at all times of the year.

Though the coronaviru­s pandemic has, and continues to be a devastatin­g event, Elizabeth hopes that social isolation may conversely bring people closer together than before.

“We’ve all lost a lot of contact in how we maintain relationsh­ips these days. And suddenly we’ve all got this time... I think it’ll teach us all a good lesson”.

The home is planning to hold back some of the letters and release them gradually to residents over the coming weeks to stave off boredom and feelings of isolation.

Elizabeth is now trying to direct well-wishers to write to Fulford’s staff, send post to their own local care home or write to someone who might be isolated in their community:

“I would ask people to send them [letters] to their local care home. To other people that they know live on their own at home. Send them a letter, tell them that you’re thinking of them, when you deliver it, smile, wave, say hello – that might be the only person they see all day.”

Elizabeth hopes the idea may be taken up by other homes.

“We’ve seen the benefits writing letters has had on our residents, so please spread the love.”

There has been huge boost in morale to residents and staff.

Elizabeth Hancock, director of Fulford Care Home, York.

 ??  ?? WORDS OF CHEER: A letter brightens the day for Fulford Care Home resident Wally. Inset, the home’s manager Donna with resident Muriel.
WORDS OF CHEER: A letter brightens the day for Fulford Care Home resident Wally. Inset, the home’s manager Donna with resident Muriel.

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