BOPDHB Checkup October 2016 | Page 24

Where would you be without your Occupational Therapist? By Occupational Therapist, Fiona Craig. As we go to print we celebrate Occupational Therapist week. The Occupational Therapist within the Allied Health team plays a very pivotal role in the patient journey through the hospital into the community. “Occupations” are all the things we do – self-care, leisure, work, looking after others and fulfilling daily roles and activities. OT’s take a holistic approach when working with and empowering patients to formulate goals and supporting them to achieve them. We work right across health services within the hospitals and the community including mental health. So if you see us, please stop for a chat and find out a bit more about what we do and how we can support your patients and continue to work collaboratively. Acute Occupational Therapy team Face to face with dementia By Communications Advisor, Stephanie Byers. You may be forgiven for thinking that your colleagues in these photos are playing dress ups in some odd team building exercise. But in actual fact they are experiencing first-hand what it’s like to live with Dementia. A ‘Dementia Reality Tour’ as it is called, was recently held at Tauranga Hospital. Twelve staff had to wear goggles, headphones blasting various background noise, ill-fitting gloves and shoe insoles and then asked to complete simple straight forward tasks in ten minutes. The idea is that these things impair the senses and interfere with the ability to concentrate; simulating what it is like for people living with Dementia. Ruth Thomas, Midland Regional Dementia Behavioural Support and Advisory Service coordinator, has been running the tours in hospitals and health organisations from Gisborne to Taranaki for the past four years. “For most it’s a frustrating experience and you can hear their sigh of relief when the ten minutes is up. But the experience really opens their eyes to what it is like to live with Dementia and often people comment afterwards how they will be much more patient when looking after people who have Dementia in future.” Ruth has had more than 150 people experience a Dementia Reality Tour and not one has ever completed all five tasks such as taking 3 tissues from a box, pouring themselves a cup water or folding three towels in the set timeframe. Tauranga Hospital staff experiencing a "Dementia Reality Tour". 24