Bernadette Kehoe Bernadette Kehoe

St Euphrasia’s Care Home – Respite Service for Religious Sisters

St Euphrasia’s Care Home in Manchester is offering respite stays for Religious sisters in a supportive and welcoming environment.

St Euphrasia’s Care Home in Blackley, Manchester, is now offering a respite service for Religious sisters who may benefit from a short period of rest, support, and renewal in a welcoming community setting.

The home provides a warm, friendly, and peaceful environment, designed to support sisters who may need additional assistance while taking time to regain their strength and independence.

During a respite stay, residents can benefit from:

  • Support with daily living

  • Assistance in regaining independence

  • A nurse call system throughout the home

  • Staff on duty 24 hours a day

  • Home-cooked meals

  • Assisted bath or shower facilities

  • A welcoming community and companionship

  • Daily Mass

  • Single bedrooms, some with en-suite facilities

  • Wi-Fi access

  • Television in each room

  • Telephone in each room with a private landline number

For further information, please contact Jayne (Manager):

Telephone: 0161 653 2010 / 07850 181556
Email: euphrasia116@gmail.com

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Bernadette Kehoe Bernadette Kehoe

The Heart of Health: Putting the Heart Back into Healthcare

The project aims to use the Church’s practical and theoretical resources to shift both the debate and shared practices around healthcare.

A group of Catholics involved in healthcare policy and practice, local politics, and theology has begun a project entitled ‘The Heart of Health: Putting the Heart Back into Healthcare.’

The project aims to use the Church’s practical and theoretical resources to shift both the debate and shared practices around healthcare. Specifically, it seeks to help people care for their physical, emotional, and spiritual health and resilience by fostering, extending, and linking existing church, healthcare, and other local communities. This effort is focused on building networks for personal mutual support, with an emphasis on the inclusion of those living in material and social poverty.

The project is inspired by various existing examples and is illuminated by the Church’s rich understanding of human beings as spiritual persons in community, endowed with dignity, freedom, and agency. It is grounded in the belief that people are made for mutual loving relationships and lives of purpose and hope.

The political benefits of this project and approach are seen in the following ways:

  1. Nearly all the ways of staying healthy and happy are cheap or free, yet health services are in constant financial need.

  2. People need support to follow these healthy ways of living.

  3. Building supportive local communities can unite people across political divides, avoiding polarization by honouring the left’s concern for solidarity and care for those in need, and the right’s concern for freedom, creativity, and independence.

  4. This is a positive and inspiring vision that can help address not only the healthcare crisis but also the ecological, financial, and social crises facing society. It offers a ready-made philosophy and language rooted in the Christian tradition, yet accessible to people of all faiths and none.

For more information, individuals are invited to join the following webinar: The Heart of Good Health: Supporting the Whole Person in Local Communities, hosted by the Las Casas Institute, Blackfriars, Oxford, on Thursday, April 3rd, from 18:30–19:45.

For more details, visit https://www.bfriars.ox.ac.uk/event/the-heart-of-healthcare/.

To register, please email lascasas@bfriars.ox.ac.uk

As the personal, social, and economic costs of current healthcare approaches rise, causing distress to both patients and healthcare professionals, this webinar brings together experts and concerned individuals from the health service, the churches, and public life. It will explore what a Catholic vision of the human person in society offers as an alternative in terms of public policy and local initiatives.

Speakers include:

  • Sr. Margaret Atkins CRSA, “The Heart of Health – A Vision for the Church and Society”

  • Professor James McManus, Director of Public Health, Wales, “Theology Meets Health Policy: A Catholic Contribution to Health Policy Starts Theologically and Proceeds Practically”

  • Thomas Horton, Head of Community Justice at His Majesty's Prison and Probation Service in Wales, “Theology in Action: Probation and Community”

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