The fun does not end when entering residential aged care
When a beloved family member is assigned to residential aged care it is probably the most shocking thing a person experiences in their life.
On 30 June 2023, 185,387 seniors, 58% aged over 85, were living in a residential aged care home, according to the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare.
If you ever wonder what wonderful things happen in aged care, look at the Facebook pages of residential aged care operators.
Forest View Childers is a community-based Not For Profit organisation caring for the aged in Childers, a rural town in Queensland's Bundaberg region.
Almost weekly, they are doing something that puts a smile on the faces of the residents and gets them involved in the playtime merriment. In February, the national broadcaster ABC broadcast a segment about Forest View Childers using gel blasters, playing cup pong, and having a disco.
"One resident, she didn't speak before," CEO Julie Mayer told ABC.
"Now all of a sudden she's speaking about her artwork, she's speaking about something she knows, and she'll engage in a conversation about it.
"Another resident was a recluse in her room.
"Now she is actively a part of this."
Melbourne's Lifeview is the first private aged care provider to achieve Rainbow Tick accreditation and will soon begin construction on Australia’s premiere LGBTIQ+ and friends aged care home in the heart of Prahran.
It is always taking its residents for day tours and is so proud of its residents that, once again, they are being ‘movie stars’ in a new series of ‘Resident Video Tours’ which are published across Lifeview's online platforms.
The videos provide a guided walkthrough of each Lifeview home, conducted by those best placed to talk about living at Lifeview – the residents.
“For this project we wanted to provide a window into a ‘day in the life’ of Lifeview and what it is that makes Lifeview communities unique. Who better to talk about that than the residents themselves?” Lifeview Executive Manager – Marketing and Communications Cody Winnell said.
“We are always very thankful the residents are so willing and happy to be involved. They really get a kick out of it and enjoy learning about what happens ‘behind the scenes’ of video shoots.”