Aged care provider VMCH is breaking down generational barriers
Corpus Christi Aged Care Resident Phyllis and Alice Hengel
The For-purpose aged and disability services organisation is partnering with Mannix College, a Catholic residential college affiliated with Monash University, to create a community service program, Mannix Young Hearts.
Since September, seven students have begun visiting VMCH’s nearby Corpus Christi Aged Care Residence in Clayton, 19km southeast of Melbourne’s CBD, taking part in activities such as music, arts and crafts, exercises, technology lessons and pampering days.
The aim of the program is to enhance the lives of both aged care residents and students – meeting both Catholic organisations’ respective Missions: to create genuine places of belonging for the vulnerable; and fostering students’ desire to make a difference in the world.
The huge benefits of intergenerational relationships are not new however, the special connection between Mannix students and aged care residents is unique. Both cohorts live in non-traditional family homes, away from loved ones.
Alice Hengel with Sr. Bernadette Gauthier.
Alice Hengel, aged 19, who is studying a Bachelor of Engineering, says living on campus is a great experience, but admits it can be a bit difficult at times.
"You don’t get to see family and friends as often as you used to, but it's a really good community, very similar to the aged care resident's community, actually. Both of my grandmothers are about the same age (as Corpus residents). I haven't been able to visit them as much as I used to, so it is good to be able to still have that connection with the older generation. So many residents have had so many different things happen in their lives, and there's just so much that you can learn from them.”
Fellow student Grace Burns, who is studying a Bachelor of Arts, says visiting Corpus is the “highlight of her day”.
“I joined the program because I personally have seen the positive impact volunteering has made on the lives of aged care residents and I just wanted to be a part of that. Hearing what things were like back then and how that is impacting how things are now is really cool; it’s allowed me to open up as a person.”
Likewise, VMCH residents are enjoying the company.
“I have all my family all over the place on three continents,” Sr. Bernadette Gauthier, aged 86, says. "So, they don't come very often."