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At the new nursing home,
residents can enjoy 24-hour nursing facilities, physiotherapy
sessions, art lessons and companionship. Forget vacant-eyed
old folk confined to bed. Nursing homes can be full of life, as
Radha Basu discovers.
Sitting in her
wheelchair on a sun-drenched balcony, Madam Catherine Lee, 70, is a
picture of concentration, gnarled fingers carefully rolling coloured
bits of paper into little balls and sticking them onto a sketch of a
large butterfly.

Her friend and
neighbour, Madam Helen Wong, 79, does the same, as they occasionally
chat with each other and a group of friends huddled around them.
They are not at an art class but a new nursing home launched by
Pacific Healthcare where, starting from $1,000 a month, residents
can enjoy 24-hour nursing facilities, physiotherapy sessions, art
lessons and that rare commodity: the companionship of others their
own age. The 259-bed home, which already has 21 residents, was
officially inaugurated by Minister of State for Trade and Industry
Heng Chee How last week, and is an answer to the Government's call
for more facilities offering long-term care for the elderly and the
infirm in a homely community setting rather than a sterile hospital
one. The home will help meet the needs of Singapore's rapidly ageing
population - in 25 years almost one in four Singaporeans is expected
to be aged 65 or above, up from about one in 12 today.
Pacific Healthcare
executive chairman William Chong alluded to this, saying that
medical advances had increased life expectancy - with many here
already living way beyond 80.
'Yet the greatest
irony of a longer life is that we spend a larger percentage of our
life with chronic disease, which makes simple daily activities such
as bathing, having meals and moving around harder,' said Dr Chong.
'Most of us will need assistance some day.' While acknowledging that
home care was still the best care, he said the practical demands and
circumstances of modern life - such as smaller families and working
children - often made it difficult. 'So we're trying to make this
place an extension of the home, with constant care and
companionship,' he said. The residents seem to agree.
'We get good care and
a chance to learn something new,' said Madam Lee, alluding to her
regular art classes and lessons in qigong, an ancient Chinese
regimen of exercise and meditation that strengthens both body and
mind. But what residents love most is having someone to talk to all
day long. Madam Lee, for instance, lived alone in a three-room
Housing Board flat, after her husband died four years ago. 'My
children and grandchildren used to visit often, but they have busy
lives. Now I can chat with others my age any time I want.'
Her eldest son, Mr
Alan Tan, said it was his mother who suggested she stay in the home
after seeing it being built. She suffered a minor stroke late last
year and has severe hypertension. 'We were looking for a place that
offers round-the-clock care and she suggested the Pacific Healthcare
Nursing Home, which she would often walk past,' said the
49-year-old, who works in an insurance company. After looking at
some older homes which seemed old and dank, he settled on it. 'She
likes cleanliness and lots of sun,' he added. Although employing a
maid to look after his mother may have been cheaper, it was never an
option, said Mr Tan. 'Maids are not trained to be nurses, and we
wanted proper care.'
FEES
AND FACILITIES
What: Pacific
Healthcare Nursing Home.
Where: Lengkok Bahru, near Jalan Bukit Merah.
Fees: $1,000 to $3,600 a month, depending on room type and medical
condition of resident. Facilities include nursing care, food and
board, exercise and counselling sessions and monthly medical
check-up.
Source:
Straits Times, Mind Your Body,
9 March 2005
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