Appeal Update

Followers of the South Wales Evening Post will realise that the appeal launched on 28th March at the Grape and Olive has got off to a resounding start. Indeed so much has been happening over the last four weeks that this ‘latest news’ bulletin has been struggling to keep up with the pace. Nevertheless just to remind readers donations can be made in the following way-

1. Make a donation at one of the many collecting points throughout the Neath, Port Talbot and Swansea areas. The Quadrant in Swansea, any of the 27 Co-operative Pharmacies, 12 Food Halls, Travel Agents, Co-operative Bank and the Britannia, Neath Workingmen’s Club. The following Funeral Directors -William Pressdee in Mumbles, R.J.Davies, Swansea, Rees Davies in Port Tennant, D.G.Phillips and G & F Webster at Marlborough Rd, Eddie Tucker Killay, Fforest Funeral Services, K.L.Richards Neath and Briton Ferry, Dyfrig Rees Jones in Cwmavon and Condon’s in Port Talbot. Maureen Cottey Florist Mumbles and Gill Clement in Newton Rd.

2. Go to the Just Giving Website via the Ty Olwen Website and look for Ty Olwen in the list of Charities.

3. Text TYOL22 £1 ( or £2, £3, £5 or £10) to 70070

4. Post a donation to our President Mrs Margaret Bartlett, 101 Derwen Fawr Rd, Sketty, Swansea, SA2 8DR

5. Ring the Chairman of the Ty Olwen Trust on 01792 535813 if you would like somebody to collect it.

6. Organise an event on our behalf. Contact the Chairman for advice.

Appeal total to date £12,000

 

 

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Name the ‘Easter Bunny’ raises £50

Mrs Charlotte Durke

Mrs Charlotte Durke, is a funeral arranger at R.J.Davies Funeral Directors in Dillwyn St, Swansea who has had personal experience of Ty Olwen having had a close relative looked after there. She decided that she wanted to ‘Give a pound to Ty Olwen’ and thought she would encourage colleagues, family and friends to join in. She arranged a ‘Name the Easter Bunny’ competition and raised £50 within days.She is now planning a ‘Spot the Ball’ type competition with a football signed by the Swans as the prize. She hopes to raise £100 next time.

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Appeal launched at The Grape and Olive

 

THOUSANDS of pounds have already poured in for a Swansea hospice at the launch of a new appeal.

The “give a £1 to Ty Olwen” campaign saw people pack out the Grape and Olive in the city’s Meridian Tower to show their support for the facility within the grounds of Morriston Hospital.

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Guests including Swansea East MP Sian James, Lord Lieutenant of West Glamorgan Byron Lewis and Swansea Sound DJ Kevin Johns were there.

Paul Murray, vice-chairman of Ty Olwen said: “It was a superb night — we raised £2,700. It was a fantastic start to the campaign and we hope people will keep on giving.

“A total of £200 came in yesterday morning through the collection box in the Quadrant in Swansea.

“We have only just started the collection.”

Mr Murray said the venue and the food was offered to the charity free of charge, and hundreds of pounds was raised through the auction prizes donated by SA Brains.

They included a hotel stay in St David’s, Pembrokeshire along with a meal for four in the Grape and Olive.

Cash was also raised through a raffle at the event.

Over the coming months the Evening Post will be lending its support to the campaign.

Every year a total of £400,000 is needed to keep the service running at the city’s Ty Olwen.

Out of every £1 people donate to the charity at least 95p goes directly to care for the patients, who have life-limiting illnesses.

Ty Olwen trustee Margaret Cain said: “It was fantastic — it was great.

“I think the campaign is going extremely well — people are listening now to the needs of Ty Olwen which is what we want.

“It’s a very important service.

“If we ever lose Ty Olwen it will never be replaced.

“Ty Olwen is important to the people of Swansea and Neath Port Talbot.”

She added: “To give a £1 is not a lot to ask. “I will do anything I can to help Ty Olwen.”

People can make donations through Ty Olwen collection boxes in the Evening Post reception. Volunteers are also needed to go out and rattle collection boxes and buckets for the charity.

Different venues and businesses are also needed to act as collection points for donations.

People can also lend their support in a variety of ways by holding collections, staging coffee mornings and afternoon teas.

Anyone able to lend their support should contact Mr Murray on 01792 535813.

elizabeth.perkins@swwmedia.co.uk

 

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Brantano Fund Raising Evening

Organiser Rachel Mitchell, Store Manager Lisa Graham and Deputy Store Manager Kelly Williams

The Brantano Store at the Morfa Retail Park recently held a Ladies Evening to raise money for Ty Olwen. They ran raffles during the evening and were supported by Lisa and John from TheCupcakeLadies and also Penumbra Photography.

Organiser Rachel Mitchell recently visited Ty Olwen to present over £200 to President Margaret Bartlett and OT Technician Joy Evans. They are going to continue supporting the work of            Ty Olwen and are now all proudly wearing pin badges.

Joy Evans OT Technician, Margaret Bartlett and Rachel Mithchell

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Richard Park visits Ty Olwen

Gina, Giles and Richard Park with Sister Rebecca Bowers, Staff Nurse Lisa Jones, Health Care Support Worker Rachel Evans and Paul Murray Vice Chairman Ty Olwen Trust

Richard Park made an emotional return to Ty Olwen with two of his ‘running’ friends to say thank you to the staff for the “unbelievable palliative care that my father received at Ty Olwen last August” and offer his support for the Evening Post Appeal. Richard decided he wanted to do something for “this marvelous charity” so he and a group of friends ran the Llanelli Half Marathon which was no mean feat for Richard as he says he is not exactly a ‘natural’ athlete. They have raised to date over £3250, which is still rising, and have also had some matched funding from Wales and the West Utilities, Richards employers. After the event Richard said-

“Well – we survived!!! There were some fantastic times by us all on Sunday, and personally I owe a massive debt of gratitude to Giles, Gina and Phil who literally pulled me through the final mile when I thought the wall in front of me wouldn’t stop getting higher!!!

Everyone performed so well and It was an amazing day! We’ve raised far more than we ever could of imagined, but we are still after more of your money – so please carry on giving whatever you can afford!!!”

One of his Dad’s best friends also ran a fund raising event in Sherwood’s in Morriston and raised £3000.

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Dr Idris Baker’s interview with Chris Peregrine of the South Wales Evening Post

Consultant aims to dispel myths about roles of hospices.

AS anniversaries go, it was a pretty special one. Swansea’s hospice, Ty Olwen, a comfort to so many, had clocked up 30 years service.

But if that 2011 landmark was a time to pause and reflect on its remarkable achievements over three decades, it was also business as usual.

It is the same this year, and will be the next . . .

And any help the public can give in backing up the money and expertise provided by the NHS will be welcomed, as it has always been.

So Ty Olwen Trust’s appeal — backed by the Evening Post — for everyone in the Swansea and Neath Port Talbot catchment area to give £1 to ensure it can run at full throttle for the next year has been welcomed by ABM’s consultant in palliative medicine Idris Baker, who spends much of his time there.

“I think it is fantastic news and offers great encouragement,” he says.

“It is important to sustain it. The money raised by the trust is such an important part of keeping the service going. The work goes on.

“The majority of our funding is by the NHS, but the additional funds that Ty Olwen Trust is able to put in enables us to do more than we would be able to do without it. We are able to do more for the people we see, and we are able to support more patients and families.

“We would not be able to do nearly as much as we can. The difference the service makes is that without it we wouldn’t be able to go that extra mile. It offers support for the volunteers, who, although not paid of course, mean a cost that goes with it.

“The volunteers keep the place afloat. A lot of that is down to the trustees. A lot of the therapy, things like occupational therapy, is funded directly by the trustees. Some of the complementary therapies, which people are able to access, is the same. Those kind of things are not provided as part of NHS services. And some of the nursing time is provided directly by the trustees.”

The hospice has 14 specialist palliative care beds, taking in patients from home, hospitals or care homes.

“A lot of it is about working on the physical symptoms that arise from the illness,” says Dr Baker. “It could be cancer or other life-limiting illnesses. But a lot of what we do is about more than physical symptoms, supporting people with the worries which quite understandably arise when you are dealing with a serious illness.

“We know when we talk to people who are seriously ill that one of the things that they want is for their families to be supported, so that is a big part of what we do as well.”

Dr Baker is keen to dispel the popular image of Ty Olwen as a place of no hope when you enter the doors as a patient.

“When people come here as in-patients on average they are here for a couple of weeks,” he says.

“It varies. Some are here for a bit longer and some for a bit shorter. The aim for many of them is to be able to get them home or closer to home once their symptoms have been sorted out, so they can actually live better.

“Let’s be blunt. I think it was seen as a death house and I think hospices all over the UK have been seen in the same way. Maybe that has changed. I am not sure it was ever really accurate anyway.

“We all know about people who have gone into hospices and died there. Some people need to go into them at the end of their lives, but it is not all of them.

“Really a lot of people who come in here do so to get a bit of a fix, to get some symptoms sorted out and turn things around and get back home with a better quality of life. A lot of them go home.”

But the physical building in the grounds of Morriston Hospital is not the full story of Ty Olwen by a long way.

“Most of what we do is not actually about the inpatients we support in this building,” adds Dr Baker.

So across Swansea and Neath Port Talbot the trust has around 170 patients on its books, supported in the home, in care homes and hospitals. And outpatients pop in for treatment as well.

“We often support people at home to fix the problems,” he says. “They may not see anything of us for a little while, but they will get in touch with us when they need us.

“Historically Ty Olwen has been very strongly associated with cancer, which is pretty much what we did, but it is not any more. We know that most people who are living with life-limiting illness have not got cancer. Cancer needs a lot of support and I hope they get plenty of that, but there are other people with other illnesses too.

“We see people at home, in care homes and as outpatients. We have specialist nurses, doctors and consultants, with access to physiotherapy, occupational therapy, specialist social work support, a day service.

“Most of the people we see are not in the hospice.”

So the old image is at best misleading.

“I think most people don’t know the range of services we provide,” he says.

“You wouldn’t know that unless you are needing them. The way sometimes people see it can be a bit of a barrier to people taking up that support when they need it.

“Certainly some patients and families worry if you mention somewhere like Ty Olwen because they think that means something terrible and it doesn’t. What it means is here’s a way to get the support you are needing.”

Dr Baker pays tribute to the pioneers of Ty Olwen all those years ago and the staff.

“It was created by a voluntary organisation, they built the building and handed it over to the NHS to run it,” he says. “They continued pouring in funding. There is a reason they started it, and that is what I keep fixing on.

“In the late 1970s they knew there was a need for a hospice because there were people whose needs could not be met as they should be, either at home or in hospitals.

“The teams that works here at one time or another is 70 and then there are the volunteers.

“They are just a fantastic team. Every patient I see tells me how great they are. They are very dedicated and they know pretty much everything about how to do their job. They just work so well together and the volunteers play a really important part as well.

“It was the first hospice of its kind in Wales and they were ahead of the game. If they hadn’t done that, we would be campaigning now to get one started.”

With a growing population as people live longer, Dr Baker expects busy times ahead.

“We expect the number of people who need this kind of support to increase,” he says. “They have been falling over the past half century. Whether they are going to be beds here, in hospital, a home or at home, we are probably going to have more people who need the support.

“One, it means we have got something that works and two, it means that the population as a whole understand what we are here for, so they are not reluctant to accept that support that can help them.

“The work goes and this year is just as important as last year, and next year will be just as important and so on.

“I am probably going to be here for the next 30 years and the service is going to be. And it needs the support because we can do more with that support than we can do without it.

“I think it is as simple as that.”

 

 

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Richard Park and team raise over £3100 for Ty Olwen so far!

Richard Park No.630 and fiends

This is what Richard had to say on his Just Giving site-

Following the unbelievable palliative care my father received from the Ty Olwen Trust in August, I decided that I should do something to raise money for this wonderful charity. I am delighted to say that some friends have offered to help me raise money for the Trust and if you are here from Giles, Gina, James, Phil, Emma, Matt, Ben, Julie or Neil sending you this link – thank you!! We have decided to run the Llanelli half marathon on March 4. Now for those of you that know me, this is somewhat of a mammoth challenge!! But with the team running this with me – it is something to look forward to! We are aiming to raise at least £1,500 for Ty Olwen, but please give as much as you can afford to this fantastic charity. Please can you also put the name of the person you are sponsoring next to your sponsorship so if we can match fund we know how much each person has raised. On behalf of us all – Thank you and please give generously!!!

Update – 5 March 2012…Well – we survived!!! There were some fantastic times by us all on Sunday, and personally I owe a massive debt of gratitude to Giles, Gina and Phil who literally pulled me through the final mile when I thought the wall in front of me wouldn’t stop getting higher!!!

Everyone performed so well and It was an amazing day!

We’ve raised far more than we ever could of imagined, but we are still after more of your money – so please carry on giving whatever you can afford!!!

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Nickel and Dime for Ty Olwen

Maureen Nicholls, Lynn Waters, Deputy Lord Mayor and Deputy Lady Mayoress of Swansea, Councillor and Mrs Dennis James and Mrs Helen Murray Chairman of Ty Olwen Trust

The Nickel and Dime Line Dancing Class have raised over £2000 for Ty Olwen as result of and amazing Prize Draw, organised by Lynn Waters with the support of Maureen Nicholls, their instructor, and members of the Class, and a Social Evening recently held at the Penllegaer Sports and Social Club. The evening was a great success and was enjoyed by Deputy Lord Mayor and Deputy Lady Mayoress of Swansea, Councillor and Mrs Dennis James and members of staff and Trustees from Ty Olwen.

A cheque was received on behalf of Ty Olwen by Delyth Gough, Trustee.

Delyth Gough receives a cheque on behalf of Ty Olwen from Lynn and Maureen.

Enjoying a night out in aid of Ty Olwen - L to R. Neil and Joy Evans (OT Technician) Pat Phillips (Volunteer) Melanie Kilner (Clinical Nurse Specialist) Ann Ayre (Volunteer) Delyth Gough (Unit Receptionist and Ty Olwen Trustee) Jean (Physiotherapist) and Geoff Archer.

 

 

 

 

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Serving up hospice funds

A RESTAURANT in Morriston has raised £535 for Swansea’s Ty Olwen hospice. Tina Wood, joint owner of Sherwoods, and entertainment manager Tony Sanders said Ty Olwen was close to their hearts.

  1. Mr Sanders said: “Tina and I wanted to thank Ty Olwen as both our mothers were looked after there last year.” In the run up to Christmas the customers of the bar and restaurant took part in the fundraising, joining in with raffles and auctions where alcoholic beverages, wine hampers and meals at the restaurant were included. The Ty Olwen Trust raises money for the Ty Olwen hospice at Morriston Hospital, which cares for patients with cancer and other life limiting diseases. The charity helps raise money for amenities and services that would not normally be provided by the NHS, as well as promoting research into causes and treatment. Mr Sanders said the fundraising was a great success. “We definitely plan to do more. We have plans but no actual dates yet,” he said.

 

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Rowberry’s Fashion Show

Ty Olwen Trustee Margaret Cain is organizing a Fashion Show presented by Rowberry’s. It takes place at the Dragon Hotel on Monday 27th February 2012. Lunch will be served at 12-30pm. Tickets are £16 and can be obtained from Margaret on Tel No. 01792  552979. All proceeds to the Ty Olwen Trust.

 

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