Bargoed care home boss who’s an inspiration to her team is in line for major award!

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Claire Wanklyn who's in line for a major award

Care homes boss who’s an inspiration to her team is in line for major award!

A Bargoed woman who has carried her deep commitment to putting people in her care first throughout her rise from the nurse to senior care homes executive has been shortlisted for a prestigious award.

As a young nurse working in the National Health Service Cheryl Wanklyn realised how vital it was to allow patients their privacy and dignity.

Claire Wanklyn who’s in line for a major award

Many years later and now operations director for a large group of care homes where colleagues describe her as an “inspiration”, she says these things are still as important to her as ever.

It is this dedication to her caring role that has landed 64-year-old Cheryl a place in the final of major national competition, the 2018 Wales Care Awards. She is shortlisted for the Outstanding Service Award, sponsored by Hallmark Care Homes.

64-year-old Cheryl Wanklyn

This is the 15th anniversary of the awards and the glittering presentation ceremony will be held at City Hall in Cardiff on Friday the 19th of October.

The awards are in association with Care Forum Wales, a not-for-profit organisation which is celebrating its own 25th anniversary this year after being set up in 1993 to give independent care providers a single professional voice with which to speak on one of the most important issues of our time – how to provide better quality care for those who need it most.

Originally from Bargoed, Cheryl trained as a nurse at the Royal Gwent Hospital in Newport immediately after leaving school.

Over the next 15 year she went on to work on the wards of NHS hospitals in Cardiff, Newport and Chepstow and became the first Enrolled Nurse in Wales to complete a conversion to Registered Nurse Level 1.

In 1995 Cheryl, who still lives in Newport, has been married to husband David for the past 38 years and has two grown-up sons, switched from the NHS to the private sector when she took on the role of manager of the Cherry Tree nursing home in Caldecott, which was eventually taken over by Hallmark Care Homes.

In 2002 she began her rise to the top of the company when she was appointed its regional manager for Wales, then a few years later regional director for Wales and eventually operations director for the whole company responsible for all 17 of its care homes in England and South Wales.

The Welsh homes include three in Cardiff and others in Caldecott, Merthyr Tydfil, the Rhondda, Maesteg and Ammanford.

Although Hallmark is based in Essex, Cheryl spends a good deal of her time overseeing and visiting the homes in Wales.

She said:

“The job is not office based and I like to call in to see them as often as possible and to be part of what they do. I try to lead by example and empower the team but as a partner in what they are doing.

“I speak at least once a week to the managers of our Welsh homes and know exactly what is happening with them all.

“During my nurse training with the NHS I learned that the privacy and dignity of patients was very important and when in care people should be able to have as normal a life as possible.

“My vision is for them to have quality of life. Things have moved on from those days but that is still very important.”

In Cheryl’s nomination for the award Hallmark’s current reguional manager for Wales Debbie South says of her:

“She leads her team with compassion and empathy, she is always on hand for advice, day or night, and always goes the extra mile to support and encourage her team.

“Always positive, she seems to have sixth sense when it comes to predicting outcomes and will gently steer her team to finding the right track and getting back on course with their journey.

“I can honestly say her her attitude is a shining example of the difference we can make to people’s lives.

“To Cheryl it is very clear we are all here for one reason and that it is to make the lives of the resients we care for happy, safe and comfortable in their surroundings. For me Cheryl is in inspiration.”

Cheryl said of her nomination:

“I was absolutely amazed by it but feel really pleased and very humble.

“It was phenomenal to be norminated in the first place but then to be shortlisted for the award is fantastic. I’m now looking forward to attending the awards evening in Cardiff.”

Mario Kreft MBE, the Chair of Care Forum Wales, said the Wales Care Awards had gone from strength to strength.

He said:

“This year’s ceremony is an even more special occasion because it marks the 15thanniversary of the Wales Care Awards and the 25th anniversary of Care Forum Wales and the event is now firmly established as one of the highlights in the Welsh social care calendar.

“The aim is to recognise the unstinting and often remarkable dedication of our unsung heroes and heroines across Wales.

“The care sector is full of wonderful people because it’s not just a job it’s a vocation – these are the people who really do have the X Factor.

“If you don’t recognise the people who do the caring you will never provide the standards that people need and never recognise the value of the people who need the care in society.

“We need to do all we can to raise the profile of the care sector workforce – they deserve to be lauded and applauded.”


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