Published Wednesday 13 Jul 2022

The quilt can offer comfort to whānau and the Te Wai symbol that’s placed on the door is a reminder to staff of our common humanity and the respect that the death of a person deserves in a hospital setting.

Losing a family member can be traumatic. It can be even more so surrounded by the hustle and bustle of a hospital.

On Friday, July 8, Wellington Quilters gifted four large quilts to Wellington Hospital as part of the Capital, Coast Te Wai Bereavement Programme. These quilts are draped over the mortuary trolley which alerts staff that something big has happened for a person or for whānau. The Te Wai Bereavement Programme is a way to offer respect and comfort when a patient dies.

A few years ago, Dr Sinéad Donnelly, Cheryl Goodyer and Angela Wilson of Whānau Care (who provide cultural and practical support for Māori patients and whānau), in collaboration with several wards, decided to do something about the distressing experience of the death of a loved one in hospital.

Dr Donnelly explained that the research they conducted among staff and families of patients lead them to their next step. “Families described the mortuary trolley that comes up to collect the body as a ‘meat van.’ We wanted to improve the experience of death in a hospital as much as we could so we thought about ways to change that graphic description.”

Former Capital, Coast ICU clinical leader, Dr Peter Hicks, died suddenly in 2018. After his death, his daughter, a quilter, linked Dr Donnelly and her team to Wellington Quilters. They offered to make a number of quilts for Wellington Hospital that have since become a key part of the Te Wai Bereavement Programme.

“Hospitals are busy places and when someone dies it is a huge event for whānau,” Dr Donnelly says. “The quilt can offer comfort to whānau and the Te Wai symbol that’s placed on the door is a reminder to staff of our common humanity and the respect that the death of a person deserves in a hospital setting.”