At Prospect Hospice, we provide outstanding, personalised and compassionate care for everyone in Swindon, Marlborough and the surrounding areas affected by a life-limiting illness, completely free of charge. For more than 40 years, we’ve been a dedicated, non-hospital, end-of-life care service for patients and their loved ones - around the clock, every day of the year. Our mission is to ensure that anyone can access the best possible expert care whenever and wherever they need it – whether at the hospice or in their own home. As a charity, we only exist because of the generosity and support of our amazing local community.
Find out about the range of end-of-life care services that we offer to patients and their families. These delivered free of charge and are designed to provide compassionate, personalised support during every stage of a life-limiting illness in every kind of care setting, to anyone who needs it.
We couldn’t do what we do without considerable support from our local community. Find out all the different ways in which you can support Prospect Hospice, including fundraising, volunteering and purchasing from our shops. All contributions are greatly appreciated and enables us to deliver care that is free of charge to our patients and their families.
Our café sits at the heart of our hospice in Wroughton and serves a range of delicious home cooked meals to suit all tastes. Whether you're looking to catch up with friends over lunch or relax with coffee and cake, our Heart of the Hospice café has you covered.
Whether shopping with us in person or online, or donating your pre-loved goods, we thank you for supporting us through our shops where you help to raise around £2million a year for Prospect Hospice.
We pride ourselves on being a great place to work and we're always looking for outstanding people to join our team at the hospice across all areas of the charity.
Prospect Hospice is the leading provider of education and training for end-of-life care in Swindon and north Wiltshire. Working closely with you, our colleagues within partner organisations, we want to ensure that the very best care is available to everyone facing the end of life. This is why we provide education and development opportunities, all of which aim to encourage learning and build confidence in end of life care and support.
Local people living with motor neurone disease (MND) in Swindon and the surrounding areas will, from today, receive enhanced care thanks to a partnership by two local charities and the NHS.
Prospect Hospice has teamed up with the MND Association to provide a new MND co-ordinator in Swindon to better support people and their families living with the illness. This new role will ensure those living with MND have access to a specialist clinical professional working with the wider community team to ensure care is well-coordinated and they are well-supported to the end of their life.
MND affects more than 5,000 adults in the UK at any one time and affects the nerves in the brain and spinal cord that help tell your muscles what to do.
For someone who has MND, the messages from these nerves gradually stop reaching the muscles which leads them to weaken, stiffen and waste, which can affect how you walk, talk, eat, drink and breathe.
Part of the team that brought the new support to Swindon
MND is a life-shortening illness and there is no cure. Although the disease will progress, symptoms can be managed to help achieve the best possible quality of life and that’s why it’s essential people with the illness are supported by the right healthcare professionals to help them live well for as long as possible.
Jeremy Lune, chief executive at Prospect Hospice, said: “For some time now, MND patients have lacked the care in this area that they deserve and we’ve worked with the MND Association to ensure we can provide a support service to these patients to ensure they live well and are cared by dedicated specialist professionals at the end of their life.
“The reality of this new service from Prospect Hospice is that those with MND and their carers will benefit from one point of specialist contact to oversee their care and care planning, helping to enable a smooth transition to hospice care if this is needed.”
To provide this role for local people, the hospice has worked in partnership with the MND Association and the NHS, and the three organisations will continue to work closely to support this essential work.
“MND is extremely complex and requires several healthcare professionals to support a person as the disease progresses. This new role means people can spend time living their life and making memories with their families, rather than feeling the burden of organising a huge number of appointments. We’re incredibly grateful to be working with Prospect Hospice and the NHS and we are delighted to welcome Dorinda into the role,” said Chris Bennett, head of regional care partnerships at the MND Association.
Patient Dale Rose with Dorinda Moffatt
One of those who has already benefitted from the expert care in this area is Clare Rose whose husband Dale died recently after living with MND for five years. Clare said: “When Dale was first diagnosed, we had no one who understood or had good knowledge about MND. A lot of other health care professionals did not really understand the disease. It is so reassuring to have someone to go to. Dorinda at the hospice is our first point of contact to go to for any problems. She brings everything together, answers any questions and we have confidence in her and her ongoing support.”
Dorinda Moffatt, the hospice’s dedicated MND and neurorespiratory specialist practitioner, will lead this new team and brings with her a wealth of respiratory practitioner experience to the role, having worked in this area of work for over 13 years.
Upon her appointment to the role, Dorinda said; “I am delighted to be taking on this role supporting people and their families living with MND. I am looking forward to the challenge of developing the service and working in partnership with my colleagues across the Swindon area. My father died from MND so I understand on both a personal and professional level the importance of helping people live well with MND and I look forward to working with patients and their families so they can make every day count”.
19 September 2023
12 September 2023