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WHAT IS COMPLEX CARE

Complex care is person-centered specialist support for someone with a chronic or long-term health condition, that requires extra assistance to manage their symptoms and daily activities to enable a high quality of life.

This type of care differs from general domiciliary care because it usually involves medical intervention of some sort and involvement with clinicians and nurses that specialise in that individual’s particular condition. Complex care can include any condition that requires clinical support, such as Parkinson’s, acquired brain injuries or a neurological condition. It can also be provided if someone requires nursing care as a result of their primary condition, for example, a PEG feeding tube after someone has had a stroke.

The aim of complex care at home is to provide support around an individual’s needs and enable them to retain their independence as much as possible.

How long I will have complex care for?

The aim of complex care from MSH Healthcare is to enable you, as much as possible, to do the things you want to do, whilst being surrounded by the place you know and love the most; your home. With that in mind, our packages of care are completely individual to you, which means they’re flexible and can adapt around your changing needs too.

We recognise that everyone’s care situation is completely different – whether you’ve just come out of hospital and need care for a for weeks or months to help you get you back on your feet, or if you have a complex condition that you’ve lived with since birth and want to be able to live by yourself. That’s why we offer different types of support, which include the following:

Live IN Care

Live In Care offers round-the-clock support to you in your home, so you can receive the care you need whenever you require it. Residing with you in your home, a live-in carer will stay with you day and night, getting to know everything about you and your routines whilst providing bespoke care. And because we understand how unsettling it may be to invite someone you don’t know to live in your home with you, we’ll work with you to select the perfect care for you, in both care experience and personality.

Visiting Care

Visiting care is dedicated home care on an hourly basis that allows you to choose when and how you need support. Carers may pop in twice a week or several hours a day to give you the support you need – whether that’s personal care and help to prepare your meals, light housework, taking you to appointments or general companionship. Visiting carers may also be involved in your care to provide a rest break for your live-in carer.

Respite Care

Respite care is designed to be delivered on a short-term basis from either a live-in carer or visiting carer. You may choose respite care if your regular caregiver needs to take a break to recharge their batteries, if you’ve just been discharged from hospital and need extra help while you recover or if you want to take a holiday or attend a celebration but are unable to by yourself. We’ll ensure that you have a carer who is able to deliver the right level of complex care that you require.

Our Services

Who can benefit from complex care support?

Anyone living with a long-term, progressive illness or injury can benefit from complex care. Overseen by our team of clinical nurses with years of medical experience and expertise, we will ensure that you have the right level of care in place for you that enables you to live well with your condition, whilst being surrounded with your home comforts.
There is a wide variety of different health conditions and symptoms that MSH Healthcare’s team can provide support with. They include:

Neurological conditions
including multiple sclerosis (MS), motor neurone disease (MND), Parkinson’s, Huntington’s and stroke Catheter, bowel and stoma care
Tracheostomy care
Gastronomy care
including PEG feeding
Acquired brain injury
Spinal cord Injury

We’ll get to know you and everything about your condition and symptoms that you need support with. That way, you can receive bespoke, person-centred care at home, enabling you to live the life you want to lead on your terms.

What goes into a complex care support plan?

A complex care support plan will include all of the details relating to an individual’s health care needs, including any diagnosis that they may have, and the treatment required.

Written in first person, a support plan is centred around the individual and their wishes, and will include important information such as their next of kin and other medical professionals involved in their care. Support plans also give detailed information and instructions to carers, ensuring that they deliver care exactly as agreed with the customer during their initial assessment. Support plans can be altered at any time by the customer’s care manager and are always reviewed every six months.

Complex care support plans will have involvement from a clinical nurse,
who will work closely with the care manager carrying out the initial assessment to ensure all aspects of the customer’s clinical care requirements are catered for. For example, there may be specific instructions for someone with a stoma and the amount of support a carer is to deliver.

All of our care plans are designed to enable an individual to lead as independent a life as possible, ensuring they have a safe environment and appropriate support to do so.

Frequently Asked Questions

Here are our most frequently asked questions to help you learn more about complex care.

Complex care is person-centered specialist support for someone with a chronic or long-term health condition, that requires extra assistance to manage their symptoms and daily activities to enable a high quality of life.

This type of care differs from general domiciliary care because it usually involves medical intervention of some sort and involvement with clinicians and nurses that specialise in that individual’s particular condition. Complex care can include any condition that requires clinical support, such as Parkinson’s, acquired brain injuries or a neurological condition. It can also be provided if someone requires nursing care as a result of their primary condition, for example, a PEG feeding tube after someone has had a stroke.

The aim of complex care at home is to provide support around an individual’s needs and enable them to retain their independence as much as possible.

Our nurses specialise in an individual’s particular condition. Complex care can include any condition that requires clinical support, such as Parkinson’s, acquired brain injuries or a neurological condition. It can also be provided if someone requires nursing care as a result of their primary condition, for example, a PEG feeding tube after someone has had a stroke.

We recognise that everyone’s care situation is completely different – whether you’ve just come out of hospital and need care for a for weeks or months to help you get you back on your feet, or if you have a complex condition that you’ve lived with since birth and want to be able to live by yourself. That’s why we offer different types of support, that's specific to you, the individual.

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Our complex care assistants are trained to manage enteral feeds and complex medication administration regimes via gastrostomy/jejeunostomy.

Our complex care assistants are highly trained to provide care for a number of neurodegenerative conditions such as Parkinson’s and Multiple Sclerosis. This includes using specialised therapies such as apomorphine pumps and providing respiratory and musculoskeletal physiotherapy.

Our nurses are trained in the management of all types of respiratory therapy from CPAP and NIV to tracheostomy management with suctioning and oxygen therapy.

Our complex care assistants are highly trained to deal with all varieties of spinal chord injury. This includes providing respiratory and musculoskeletal physiotherapy the prevention and management of autonomic dysreflexia episodes. Our staff are also trained to manage specialised equipment such as Baclofen pumps for symptom management.