May 1 to 8 is Hospice Week

In the words of Hospice movement founder, Dame Cecily Saunders, "You matter because you are you, and you matter to the end of your life."

BACK in 2013, an Alberton mom honoured her dying daughter’s last wish – to open a hospice facility in Alberton that would take care of people facing life-limiting illnesses, and their families.

At the time, neither Tersia Burger nor the rest of her six-woman steering committee ever thought that in the four years that would follow Stepping Stone Hospice would grow to the extent where they, this year, signed off on an annual budget of R16 million!

In a week that has been declared National Hospice Week internationally, running from May 1 to 8, it’s a good time to look at Stepping Stone Hospice & Care Services in New Market Park as a facility that has grown from a staff complement of two paid staff members back in June 2013, to the 35 full-time and 36 part-time staff they have today.

The statistics are not only staggering, but also highlight the desperate need in our community and surrounds for professional palliative care. Palliative care can be described as an approach that improves the quality of life of patients and their families facing the difficulties associated with life-limiting illness. This is done through the prevention and relief of suffering by means of early identification, impeccable assessment and the treatment of pain and other problems – physical, emotional, psycho-social and spiritual.

Says Tersia Burger, CEO: “The mere fact that we are faced with the mammoth task of raising funds to extend our In-Patient Unit facilities, a sum that runs into the R4-million bracket, must be a clear indication that the services we provide are now an integral part of the communities we live in. Life-limiting illnesses are a reality many of us have to face.”

In 2013, 97 Stepping Stone Hospice patients died. In 2016, 235 Stepping Stone hospice patients died – an increase of over 227 per cent.

“Many factors have contributed to patients and their families turning to us for help,” explains Tersia. “People have certainly become more aware of us and what we stand for. In the words of the hospice movement founder, Dame Cecily Saunders, ‘You matter because you are you, and you matter to the end of your life.’ We will do all we can, not only to help you die peacefully, but also to help you live until you die,” adds Tersia.

Stepping Stone Hospice is a true testimony to Dame Saunders’ words. “Our services to our patients and their families extend so much further than the norm. We have helped many patients fulfill their last wishes, and as recently seen, we have helped a patient’s son get a full bursary to continue his studies. It’s what we do. For us it’s not just a job, but a calling, and we are humbled by the fact that we can help and deliver these services,” says Tersia.

To learn more about Stepping Stone Hospice & Care Services and how you can help them help others, please visit www.steppingstonehospice.co.za.

For free daily local news in the south, visit our sister newspapers Alberton RecordComaro ChronicleSouthern Courier and Get it Joburg South Magazine.

Remember to visit our FacebookTwitter and Instagram pages. You can also email our offices on cvdwalt@caxton.co.zajuliem@caxton.co.za or luckyt@caxton.co.za

Add us on WhatsApp today! Alberton Record: 060 644 5264 Comaro Chronicle: 079 427 8074 and Southern Courier: 079 404 5789.

Exit mobile version