Abstract
Hospitalized sub-acute medicine patients face challenges to their functional and cognitive abilities as they await transfer to long-term care facilities or return home. The Continuous Quality Improvement (CQI) Council, representing a multidisciplinary team of healthcare professionals working in the Sub-Acute Medicine Unit (SAMU), implemented a twice-weekly lunch program called the Lunch Bunch in order to combat depression and delirium in our elderly and cognitively impaired patients. The Lunch Bunch initiative includes chaplains, nurses and physiotherapists who have provided a framework through which essential socialization and exercise for this vulnerable population is facilitated. Providing a means for both mental and physical stimulation also allows patients to open up and discuss hidden feelings of loneliness and isolation, thereby beginning a journey of spiritual and emotional healing.
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CITATION STYLE
Feyerer, M., Kruk, D., Bartlett, N., Rodney, K., McKenzie, C., Green, P., … Adcroft, P. (2013). The Lunch Bunch: an innovative strategy to combat depression and delirium through socialization in elderly sub-acute medicine patients. Nursing Leadership (Toronto, Ont.), 26 2013, 43–51. https://doi.org/10.12927/cjnl.2013.23360
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