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Key things to help you everyday Latest industry developments

DCMI participant Bethanie trial app detecting early signs of COVID-19 in elderly

With the cases of COVID-19 escalating, Perth-based retirement village and aged care provider Bethanie is taking the lead by participating in a six-month trial of a smartphone app aimed at detecting the virus early in older people from the safety of their own homes.

Up to 100 residents of Bethanie, whose village managers participate in the DCM Institute, will be monitored by a team of healthcare professionals to determine the effectiveness of the digital platform Openly.

The Early Digital Intervention for Covid Therapy (EDICT) program, a collaboration between the University of Western Australia, clinical biotech company Emyria, Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital, the Bethanie Group, and the Institute for Respiratory Health, is working to develop leading technology to detect the early signs of the coronavirus in the elderly.

The $880,000 Western Australian Government-funded pilot program will monitor a person’s general health and wellbeing through the platform. It will also record vital signs such as heart rate using a smartphone.

“We know the elderly are among the most vulnerable members of the community if infected with the virus,” Bethanie CEO Chris How (pictured above) said.

“It is important to embrace new technology which has the potential to save lives and keep people out of hospital.”

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Leilani found her true vocation as a Village Manager after 25 years working for Woolworths

Leilani Leslie had worked for Woolworths in Queensland for 25 years when she was made redundant.

“I had spent my entire career there in various roles including Internal Audit and Food Safety,” Leilani said.

“I had successfully survived many re-structures within the company, however in 2019, my world as I knew it came crashing down when I was made redundant. Over the next three months I applied for 37 roles, most in the fields I had worked in previously, however three had popped up in my SEEK profile for the Retirement Industry.”

Leilani was given an insight into the retirement and aged care sector when her late father had dementia for the last five years of his life. She started as a Village Manager at Reside Communities’ Brookland Robertson retirement village in August 2019 and has never looked back.

“One of the most wonderful things about life as a Village Manager is the varied days you have,” she said.

“There really is no ‘typical’ day, however as an example, it could be made up of one or all of the following tasks: meeting with a resident regarding a question or suggestion they have, making a coffee for a resident in the café, sorting mail, setting up chairs for the next event scheduled for the community centre, editing and printing newsletters, putting out a notice for EKKA Sundaes or Hot Chip Fridays, showing a new resident our facilities, sharing a resident’s proud photos of their grandchildren over a coffee, helping a resident access social media, planning for a Melbourne Cup function, taking a phone call from various tradespeople about maintenance within the village, driving the village bus to Sunnybank Plaza or Bunnings to pick them up after their shopping outing. There really is no start or end to my role, which I find to be fabulous!”

Leilani said the qualities needed to be a Village Manager are patience, a sense of adventure and imagination, the ability to organise and a good memory for names.

“You need to have the ability to laugh and cry with the residents, to be able to put yourself in their shoes, to be ‘real’ in the true sense of the word. I know it might be cliché, however I have come to think of the residents as my extended family. It’s like I now have over 100 grandparents!”

The greatest pleasure is to see the excitement on her residents’ faces when on an outing or at an event.

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Key things to help you everyday

Recent trends in retirement village dispute resolution

The attendees at the quarterly Professional Development Day in Adelaide earlier this month were treated to a great presentation by Michael Spencer of O’Loughlins Lawyers.

Michael has been a litigation lawyer for over 20 years, and he regularly represents retirement village operators in the South Australian Civil and Administrative Tribunal. The Health, Aged Care and Retirement Living team at O’Loughlins Lawyers has been recognised this year by Best Lawyers as the Law Firm of the Year (for Australia) in Retirement Villages and Senior Living Law.

Michael explained that between 2019 and 2021, there was an increase by more than 50% in the requests made to the advocacy program of Aged Rights Advocacy Service (which is the SA member of the Older Persons Advocacy Network. O’Loughlins Lawyers have similarly experienced an increase in retirement village disputes coming to them in the past few years.

The reasons for this include:

  • the transition to Baby Boomers as residents;
  • increased awareness of rights;
  • more residents with behavioural problems associated with cognitive decline and mental illness; and
  • more children of residents being concerned about their inheritances.

While Michael talked through the relevant provisions of the South Australian legislation, and the general tactics that village managers might adopt in their management of disputes, the highlight of the presentation was his “war stories” from recent tribunal cases.

Those stories from recent South Australian cases where O’Loughlins Lawyers represented the operator included:

  • The resident who was a hoarder, and it took three crime scene cleaners (yes, the people who clean up murder scenes!) three days to clean the resident’s apartment. The smell from the apartment had been wafting through the building, and maggots were crawling out under the front door to the distress of other residents and staff. The Tribunal made an order that the resident move out of the village.
  • The resident who verbally and physically attacked (including with a frying pan!) other residents and their visitors. The evidence of the psychologist who had been brought in early to resolve disputes between this resident and other residents was key in the resident voluntarily leaving the village – before the Tribunal could order her out.
  • The accountant daughter of a resident who disputed the calculation of her father’s exit entitlement. The Tribunal sided with the operator, notwithstanding the daughter producing legal advice from three different law firms supporting her interpretation of the residence contract.
  • The resident who sought compensation associated with moving out of his village because the operator had not taken sufficient action against a second resident who had been behaving badly. The Tribunal decided that the operator had not been obliged to bring a case to the tribunal against the second resident, and thus dismissed the first resident’s case.
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Facility Manager Key things to help you everyday

Jacqui Perkins hosting the next two DCM Institute Professional Development Masterclasses

Leadership learning guru Jacqui Perkins is hosting the next two DCM Institute Masterclasses.

The world-renowned expert is hosting the Selling Solutions Masterclass ‘Closing with Confidence’ on Tuesday, 9 August.

This Masterclass will change the way participants think about ‘closing’. Contrary to what managers  might think, it’s not about ‘selling’, it’s about empowering your client to make an informed decision. A decision that best meets their stated, and unstated, needs.

Jacqui will also cover how to convert undecided leads, using tension building questions to fast-track their decision-making process.

Jacqui will discuss the concept of ‘closing’ as simply being the final step – in a series of small steps – with a potential resident.

Please look out for the pre-work videos that will add value to your experience of the masterclass!

REGISTER HERE

Jacqui Perkins’ Selling Solutions Masterclass
Closing with Confidence
Tuesday 9 August
WA |
1:00pm SA | 1:30pm QLD, NSW, ACT, TAS & VIC | 2:00pm

Seven days later – Tuesday, 16 August – Jacqui will present Masterclass No. 7 of the Intentional Leadership series, addressing the topic of ‘Developing Resilience as a Leader’.

This Masterclass will discuss the concept of resilience not simply being a trait —but a skill to be developed. She will be looking at tried and tested techniques that participants can keep in mind to help build resilience.

Once again, look out for the pre-work videos that will add value to your experience of the masterclass.

REGISTER HERE

Jacqui Perkins’ Intentional Leadership Masterclass
Developing Resilience as a Leader

Tuesday 16 August
WA |
1:00pm SA | 1:30pm QLD, NSW, ACT, TAS & VIC | 2:00pm