A Residential/Nursing and Dementia care home should be a community you can fall in love with - somewhere that cares for your physical, emotional, and intellectual well-being. At Ashfields House, you can be the person you want to be: discussing the day's news with friends, trying your hand at new activities, or relaxing in a quiet corner with a book and your own thoughts.
You come and go as you please because the doors are always open. But if you really want to know about life at Ashfields House, you can pop in for a visit any time.
You come and go as you please because the doors are always open. But if you really want to know about life at Ashfields House, you can pop in for a visit any time.
Services
When you make the move from life on your own to life in a residential/nursing care home, you have a right to expect better care and greater happiness. Residential/Nursing care for the elderly is not about marking time. It's an opportunity to spread your wings - to make new friends and try new activities.
It's not all about being social and on your feet. There are plenty of opportunities to be active and joyful, but just as much time to be quiet and reflective. There's something for everyone from singing to baking to writing blogs and communicating with your family via the internet. If you like gardening and feel green-fingered, you can help with the show of colour in the gardens.
You should be very proud of all your staff, whatever their role. Throughout Geoff Cornell's illness and death your staff dealt with Geoff and Mary with care, compassion, understanding and gentleness. But what has touched Phil is the way that it has extended to us too. They were sensitive, thoughtful at every visit, feeding us, making us cups of tea at all sorts of times, looking after us too throughout the 2 weeks Geoff was so ill.