Methodist Homes (MHA)

Methodist Homes (MHA) is the largest charity care provider in the UK[2]. The charity's missions is to inspire the best care and wellbeing at every stage of later life.[3]

Methodist Homes (MHA)
FormationSeptember 1943
TypeCharitable organisation
HeadquartersEpworth House, 3 Stuart Street, DE1 2EQ
Location
Region
United Kingdom
Chairman
John Robinson
Chief Executive
Sam Monaghan
Revenue (2018/19)
£245.8 million[1]
Staff (2019)
7,500 [1]
Volunteers (2019)
4,000 [1]
Websitewww.mha.org.uk
Formerly called
Methodist Homes for the Aged

Through 90 specialist care homes, 70 thriving retirement living and 62 vibrant community groups and befriending, MHA aim to enable older people to live later life well.[4]

MHA was established as an independent charity by the Methodist Church in 1943 and was formerly known as Methodist Homes for the Aged. Whilst MHA is open to providing care and support to people of all faiths and none, the charity continue to have strong support from Methodists as well as other Christians to this day.[5]

MHA's head office is based in Derby, with award-winning residential, nursing and dementia care homes[6], retirement housing and community support services provided across England, Scotland and Wales.

Charitable work

Established in 1943, MHA now delivers a range of services to over 18,500 individuals [1].

The charity run 90 residential, specialist dementia and nursing care homes, as well as more than 70 thriving retirement living communities and 62 vibrant community groups (formerly Live at Home) for older people who live independently in their own homes. The community groups aim to tackle loneliness and isolation among older people[1].

All donations and any surplus generated is invested into the services MHA provide for 18,500 residents and members.

MHA serves approximately 10,500 older people supported through 62 Live at Home services in the community, 3,000 older people living independently in 70 retirement living communities with flexible support and personalised care, with a further seven sites in development, and 5,000 older people living in 90 care homes. [1].

Their services are provided by 7,500 staff supported by 4,000 volunteers [1].

gollark: For an example of something which is infinite but does *not* contain all possible number strings, think about, I don't know, 0.010110111... (infinite sequence of zeroes and then an increasing number of ones). That doesn't contain all possible number strings because it only contains 0 and 1.
gollark: It actually hasn't been proven to contain any possible number string.
gollark: That sounds more like physics.
gollark: I'd say the axioms are invented/defined, but the consequences of those are discovered.
gollark: Alternatively, [0-9A-Za].

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.