- Home
- Residential Aged Care
- Home Care
- Retirement Living
- Support Services
- Aged Care Jobs
Need help?
We offer a free aged care concierge and comparison service helping you secure the best aged care available.
1300 197 230
on Tuesday, April 28, 2020
Not-for-profit aged care home Mercy Place Edgewater is appealing to locals who would like to revive the long lost art of letter writing.
The residential care home is seeking to develop a network of pen pals in the local community to correspond with their elderly residents.
Mercy Place Edgewater Service Manager, Alison Devonport, explains that while the home has increased the range of one-to-one activities for residents during this challenging time, the new pen pal program would bring an added dimension to the seniors’ lives.
"We all remember the joy of going to the letterbox and receiving a letter from a friend, and then taking the time to write back,” Ms Devonport says. “And this is particularly relevant for our elderly residents who had pen pals when they were younger, and we would love to give them the opportunity to rebuild or expand their social networks during this time.
“And so we are appealing to those in the local community who would like to re-discover the joy of letter writing to contact us, as we would love to put them in touch with one of our residents who would be keen to connect with a new pen pal and enjoy hearing their news and learning a little about their life.
“Those who are interested may be young or old, we really don’t have a preference as we know our residents will just love receiving a handwritten letter, perhaps for the first time in many years.”
People wanting to become a pen pal for a Mercy Place Edgewater resident can email Carol Smith on jillian.carol.smith@mercy.com.au
All residents’ correspondence is thoroughly sanitised as part of the strict measures in place within the home.
Find out more about Mercy Health.
Join 10,000+ subscribers for the latest news