Brother
Francis OSB, CLIC Sargent nurse and Trustee of ACT, the UK charity
which represents children with life-limiting or life-threatening
conditions and their families, has gained two awards for his dedicated
work with children and young people who have cancer.
The
awards recognise Brother Francis’ many years of service providing
care and support for seriously ill children, many of which won’t
live to reach adulthood. Brother Francis has played a key
role in providing children and their families with ongoing
nursing care and a wide range of palliative care support at home
– so that children and their loved ones do not have to spend so
much time in hospital.
Brother
Francis received the The WellChild Best Community Practitioner
award, nominated by patients and their families for going beyond
the call of duty to help children in his care, and supporting
and advising their families at the Demelza-James
Project in Brighton - a childrens' community charity providing
ongoing nursing care at home for children and their families.
The
second, an Exceptional Care Award, was presented by the Sussex
Cancer Partnership in September – again for supporting children,
young people and their families in the community so to limit hospital
visits and minimize disruption to their lives.
Brother Frances said:
“I
am deeply honoured that I have been given these wonderful awards
– however I want to honour and remember the children and families
that I work with every day – I am always moved by young people’s
resilience, spirit and bravery. Each day of the year in the UK
ten families are told that their child has leukaemia. From that
day on their lives will never be the same again. My role
is to try and help these children and their families cope and
keep life as normal as possible. Each day brings new challenge,
new possibilities and sometimes sadness.”
Contact:
Myra Johnson, Communications Manager, ACT, E-mail:
myra@act.org.uk
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