The end of March marks the culmination of a three-year partnership with the Defence Medical Welfare Service (DMWS), during which we have worked together to deliver a bespoke welfare service for the Armed Forces community in hospitals and across Southern England, as part of a project originally initiated by us and funded by the Chancellor using LIBOR funds.
More than 5,500 members of the Armed Forces community have benefited from the service, including Susan (pictured below) who was unable to visit her husband in hospital due to COVID-19 restrictions after he sustained a life-threatening head injury during a cycling holiday. An iPad was made available so Susan could see her husband after he woke from an induced coma. She was also assisted with accommodation near to the hospital and a DMWS welfare officer was provided to give her the emotional support she needed to reduce her isolation and anxiety.
Susan says: “Due to COVID-19, the wards were closed and I was not able to see my husband. Having someone visit him and then update me was so much easier than trying to contact the hospital; I felt like I had someone on my side.”
Due to the project’s success, we have recently made an additional grant of £200,000 to fund its continuation, in partnership with NHS Trusts – ensuring these welfare officers can continue supporting the Army family.
Paul Gaffney, CEO of DMWS, says: “Working in partnership with ABF The Soldiers’ Charity has enabled the Defence Medical Welfare Services to optimise support to those that need it most. It is at extraordinary times like these that both organisations step forward and make a real difference on the ground.”
Brigadier (Ret’d) Peter Monteith, Chief of Staff at ABF The Soldiers’ Charity, says: “It is a pleasure to have been working in partnership with DMWS for the last three years. Our combined efforts have made a real and positive difference to the lives of so many members of the Army family. This has been especially important during the challenging and uncertain times of the last 12 months.”