A physiotherapist who has worked in the NHS for 40 years is celebrating her retirement by abseiling down the side of St Thomas’s hospital.
Suzanne Roberts is head of integrated rehabilitation services at Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust – which means she is in charge of looking after people at home in Southwark and Lambeth.
She will be taking on the 160-foot abseiling challenge in September to raise money for the trust.
Suzanne said: “I’m so happy to have worked in the NHS, especially during the pandemic – even though that sounds like a strange thing to say. The way our community services changed and responded during Covid-19 has been so impressive – the staff have worked their socks off. It has been an immensely stressful time but our community staff have continued to care for patients in their own homes in unbelievable numbers.
“One of my earliest memories from the pandemic was delivering personal protective equipment (PPE) to our staff from the boot of my car when the guidance suddenly changed, it was my Del Boy moment.”
Her career in the NHS began in September 1981, when she trained to be a physiotherapist at St Mary’s Hospital in Paddington.
She said: “I originally applied to St Thomas’ School of Physiotherapy but they turned me down, so it’s funny that 40 years later I’m finishing my career here.”
Suzanne, 58, was a respiratory physiotherapist and has spent a lot of time caring for patients on intensive care wards.
She said: “There have been some big changes over the last 40 years but the thing that stands out most to me is that patients are now sicker and often more complex – both those in hospital and those we care for at home. Previously, a lot patients were essentially well but were on the wards for weeks at a time – young men with broken femurs and people having varicose vein surgery. Now, with advancements in treatment and technology, these patients are in and out.”
Suzanne added: “It will be a fitting final farewell and I’m really looking forward to it. Guy’s and St Thomas’ has been an amazing organisation and I’m going to miss it, but it’s time to hand over to the next generation – it’s good to leave somewhere feeling a little bit sad.
“I really hope allied health professionals going into the NHS will see working in the community as a real career choice – among others, we need physiotherapists, occupational therapists and speech and language therapists committed to delivering care to people at home.”
After retiring Suzanne hopes to spend six months on a canal boat with her husband, and to become a ‘community grandma’.
She said: “I want to help children with reading in school, join in with some community gardening, and try and get a bit fitter.”
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