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Proud day for Tralee’s senior citizens when HSE Chief officially opens new Baile Mhuire Day-Care Centre

THE €1.4 million Baile Mhuire Day Care Centre for the elderly has been officially opened in Balloonagh, Tralee by the Director General of the Health Service Executive, Tony O’Brien.

Employing 16 people, the facility opened its doors last April and it now provides a full range of care to the elderly four days a week.

However it was announced today that the service will be expanded to five days a week from September 2014.

The Centre provides personal, nursing, paramedical, social and pastoral care which support older people to remain independent in their home or within their community environment, for as long as possible.

The Chairman of Baile Mhuire, Aidan Kelly, said: “Volunteers were instrumental in the establishment of Baile Mhuire back in 1988 and they continue to play a pivotal role in the daily running of the centre. We are fortunate that we have such wonderful volunteers who give of their time so freely and generously.”

Baile Mhuire came into being in the mid-1980s when there was a great need for an interim unit to provide recuperation and respite care for older people in the Tralee and surrounding areas.

A curtailment of expenditure by the health service was the motivation of Fr. Maurice Brick and the late Sr. Pius Collins, with the help of Social Action, to set about the huge task of providing such a service.

A typical day in the new day centre sees the clients of Baile Mhuire enjoy a range of activities focusing on personal care to spiritual time, and light entertainment while their meals are prepared in the state-of-the-art kitchen and served in the spacious dining area.

A hard working Board of Management guarantee the smooth running of the unit but Aidan Kelly identified two dedicated stalwarts who sadly did not live to see the completion of the new centre.

“We still think of our former Chairman Tommy O’Connor and former Nurse Manager Eileen Brick. They will always live within the centre as we have named the Quiet Room after Tommy and the inner courtyard is now Eileen’s Garden so that their memories live on,” said Aidan.

He paid tribute to everyone who contributed to the fund that has financed the development including: Bon Secours Hospital Tralee Community Fund, Mercy Order, Dormant Accounts, Rapid Funding, both capital and revenue funding from the HSE, flag days and church gate collections.