Cancer patient's farewell to horse
November 2014
An elderly cancer patient has died just hours after she was
granted her final wish to be reunited with her favourite horse as she laid in
her hospital bed.
Sheila Marsh told staff at the Royal Albert Edward Infirmary
in Wigan she wanted to say a last goodbye to her horse, Bronwen, whom she had
looked after for 25 years.
They arranged for two of her horses to be brought to the
hospital car park on Monday and the 77-year-old grandmother was wheeled outside
by nurses in her bed.
After Mrs Marsh gently called to Bronwen, the animal bent
down gently and nuzzled her cheek - with the moment captured in a touching
photograph by hospital staff. Mrs Marsh, a mother-of-two who used to work at Haydock Park
Racecourse, died hours later on Monday night.
Her daughter Tina, 33, praised staff at the hospital for
helping her mother achieve her final wish. "I was happy because she got to
see her favourite horse," she said. "She had a big smile on her face and she was able to
say Bronwen's name, after she had found it difficult to speak.
"The staff were absolutely fantastic. The nurses who
looked after mum were brilliant."
Bereavement specialist nurse Gail Taylor said Mrs Marsh,
from Wigan, had also been reunited with her dog who spent an hour on the ward
curled up in a blanked next to her.
She said: "End-of-life care with our patients is
paramount and fundamental to what we do. "We put our patients and family
at the centre of everything we do, especially in their last days or hours of
life. We listened and acted on Mrs Shelia Marsh's last wishes.
"We have captured many pictures of this special moment
to be collated into a commemorative photo album which we will present to Tina
and family."
Pauline Law, deputy director of nursing, said: "I am
really pleased to have been able to facilitate the visit from Mrs Marsh's
horse. "This was obviously extremely important to her and her
family and we feel privileged to have been able to provide this support at this
crucial stage of her care.
"It is absolutely right that we should pull out all the
stops to ensure that our patients and their families receive personalised,
compassionate and dignified care at the end of their life and this is what we
will always strive to achieve."
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