Live Life in Colour – A Seniors Festival 2026 Event
Let's celebrate! Join us for a vibrant morning of short presentations covering your rights as you age, travel and road apps, and digital decluttering tips. Peruse the variety of local information stalls on caring, legal issues, and volunteering opportunities across Coffs Harbour, helping you stay informed, confident, and thriving as you continue to bloom.
Date: Tuesday, 3 March 2026
Time: 10.30am to 12.30pm
Location: Level 2, Harry Bailey Memorial Library, Yarrila Place
Cost: Free
For more information, check out the Live Life in Colour event webpage.
Chill & Chat – Free Men’s Program
Looking for a relaxed space to connect, unwind and enjoy some time just for you?
Chill & Chat is a FREE program creating a safe, welcoming space for men to come together, play games, socialise and enjoy some snacks.
This all abilities program is open to men experiencing mental health challenges, living with disability, supporting someone with disability, facing social or physical barriers or anyone simply wanting some extra “me time” to focus on their wellbeing.
Chill and Chat events are held at Port Macquarie and Wauchope.
Port Macquarie events:
- Date: 1st and 3rd Wednesdays of every month
- Time: 1.30pm to 3pm
- Location: Port Macquarie Neighbourhood Centre - 2 Dodds Street, Port Macquarie
Wauchope events:
- Date: 2nd and 4th Wednesdays of every month
- Time: 1.30pm to 3pm
- Location: Wauchope Neighbourhood Centre - 4 Tallowood Avenue, Wauchope
For more information, check out the Chill & Chat page on the Port-Hastings Council website.
Long Pose Portrait Session
Join artist Seabastion Toast at Yarrila Arts and Museum (YAM) for a relaxed, three-hour long-pose drawing session. This untutored environment is designed for artists of all levels to sharpen their observation skills and develop detailed, layered works from a sustained clothed pose. While there is no formal teaching, Seabastion will paint alongside the group, offering a unique look into her professional figurative process within a supportive, calm atmosphere.
The session welcomes all mediums, with basic drawing materials and acrylics provided on-site. Participants are welcome to bring their own low-irritant supplies to use during the three-hour block, which includes regular breaks with tea, coffee, and biscuits. Whether you're looking to push your creative boundaries or simply enjoy uninterrupted flow, this monthly event provides the perfect space to reconnect with your practice.
Date: Sunday, 15th February 2026
Time: 10.30am - 1.30pm
Location: Yarrila Arts and Museum, Yarrilla Place, 27 Gordon St, Coffs Harbour
Cost: $35
For more information and to book visit the Portrait Session event webpage.
Motor Neurone Disease Online Course
Expand your knowledge by signing up for the new free Motor Neurone Disease MOOC (Massive Open Online Course). Developed by the University of Tasmania's Wicking Dementia Centre, this self-paced course offers expert insights into all aspects of the disease, to help improve awareness and care worldwide.
For more information and to enrol visit the course webpage on the University of Tasmania Wicking website.
Board Game Cafe
A friendly space to connect and enjoy a cuppa with other seniors. Come along, bring a friend and meet new people.
Bookings not required.
Date: Last Thursday of every month
Time: 10.30am to 12.30pm
Location: Nambucca Heads Library - 23 Ridge Street, Nambucca Heads
Cost: Free
For more information, check out the Nambucca Valley Council event webpage.
CHSP Workforce Symposium: Rethinking Aged Care Workforce Challenges
Join the Community Industry Group for an exclusive part-day symposium designed for CHSP aged care executives and HR professionals to tackle one of the sector’s most pressing challenges: recruitment and retention.
This event brings together industry leaders and innovators to share evidence-based workforce trends, and best practice strategies. Gain actionable insights and practical tools to strengthen your workforce and meet evolving demands.
What You’ll Learn
- Current Workforce Analysis: Patterns, turnover rates, and emerging trends
- Economic Impact & Market Implications
- Recruitment & Retention Strategies
- Innovative Workforce Solutions: Practical tips and real-world examples
- Psychological Safety & Leadership Excellence
Date: Thursday, 26th February 2026
Time: 12pm - 4pm AEDT
Location: Online.
For more details and to register visit the CHSP Workforce Symposium booking page
Depression in Older Adults Webinar
Join Professor Viviana Wuthrich, Director of the Macquarie University Lifespan Health & Wellbeing Research Centre, for an essential webinar on identifying and supporting older adults with depression.
Gain expert insights into the unique nuances of late-life symptoms and walk away with practical, evidence-based strategies to improve your confidence in providing meaningful mental health support.
Run by Anglicare, this webinar aims to increase understanding of depression in older adults, how to detect and assess for depressive symptoms, and practical strategies that can be used to support a person with depression. This will include discussion of common symptoms of depression and nuances in the presentation of depression in later life. The webinar will also outline the common causes of depression in later life, as well as provide some practical strategies about how to talk to, and support, an older person with depression.
The webinar aims to increase attendees' knowledge and confidence in identifying and supporting an older person with depression.
Date: Wednesday, 25th February 2025
Time: 12:00pm - 1.00pm AEDT
Location: Online
To sign up visit the Webinar Registration Page.
Learning Agility in Aged Care Workshop
Explore how agile thinking and behaviour support effective decision making
This session introduces the concept of Learning Agility and its importance in an aged care environment characterised by ongoing reform, increasing complexity, and heightened consumer expectations. Participants explore how agile thinking and behaviour support effective decision making, adaptability, and leadership capability across frontline and management roles.
Session Focus
- What Learning Agility is and why it matters in a high-change sector
- Key dimensions of agility and their relevance to aged care practice
- Current sector challenges that require agile responses
- Applying agile thinking to typical workplace scenarios (case studies)
- Strategies individuals can use to strengthen their own learning agility
- Reflection and action planning to embed agile behaviours on the job
Date: Wednesday, 18th March 2026
Time: 1pm - pm
Location: Online - For more information and to register visit the Learning Agility in Aged Care registration page.
Dignity of Risk v Duty of Care for CHSP Providers – Non-clinical
Join SMR Sector & Support Development for a 1.5 hour online training session with Dr Melanie Tan from Clinical Governance Consulting.
During this session we will cover:
- the concept of dignity of risk (and how this relates to person-centred care)
- what ‘duty of care’ means in a community context
- how to balance dignity of risk and duty of care and what this looks like.
This session is for Direct care staff in the home or social support settings (non-clinical).
Date: Monday, 16th February 2026
Time: 9.30am - 11am AEDT
For more information and to book, go to the Event Registration page (Non-clinical)
Please note Dr Melanie Tan is hosting a separate session for Decision-makers and Coordinators:
Date: Thursday, 12 February
Time: 9.30am - 11am
For more information and to book, go to the Event Registration page (Decision-makers/Coordinators)
‘Fase3’ Tool to Support Aged Care Choices
Choose to maximise control of your future care needs.
Can you see the time approaching when you may need some help at home? Or home may no longer be the best place for you to live? Or is Mum or Dad, or another family member, in need of support and you’re not sure what’s available, or who to talk to?
Researching your options, the costs and how to start the process will help you and your family to remain in control. Use this tool to help you stay in charge of your life and make your own decisions. If you are making decisions for someone else, use this tool to help think about what they might decide to do themselves.
Choose your pathway for quality of life through your older years.
For more information visit the Fase3 website.
Dementia Support
Need a hand or a little advice? Specialist advisors are ready to help with any concern, large or small.
Chat with a Dementia Australia expert Advisor via live messaging, free and confidentially, for information and support.
Available 24/7, every day of the year.
For more information and to chat with an Advisor visit the Helpline webpage.
Mental Health First Aid Guidelines – Confusion in Older People
Have a read of this extensive and useful resource covering many topics associated with confusion and dementia in older people:
Confusion in Older People: Mental Health First Aid Guidelines
Literacy Coaching and Support
Forster Library offers free one-on-one tutoring for adults, whether English is your first or second language.
Tutors can help with:
- filling out forms
- understanding mail
- writing and reading
- using computers.
Flexible session times are available.
We also welcome volunteer tutors—a great opportunity to give back to the community.
Contact Forster Library on (02) 7955 7001 to learn more or get involved.
Daily Wellness Habits to Maintain Independence E-book
Learn how to maintain independence in your everyday life through simple gentle habits, including morning routines, nutrition and mindfulness
‘Everyday Tools to Help Mob’ Guide
The latest guide from Independent Living Assessment offers practical solutions to make everyday tasks simpler and safer.
The LiveUp Everyday Tools to Help Mob Guide lists tools from kettle tippers and ergonomic scissors to handy gardening aids, these tools are designed to support independence at home.
Developed as part of the LiveUp healthy ageing initiative, the guide was created in collaboration with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander organisations and older community members.
Translating and Interpreting Services for Aged Care
Translating and interpreting services are available to help people from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds engage with aged care.
These services are free for older people, their families and carers, and government-funded aged care providers.
Translating and Interpreting Services for Aged Care | Department of Health, Disability and Ageing
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Auslan Emergency Interpreting App Now Available
The Auslan Emergency Interpreting (AEI) App is now available for Deaf and hard of hearing Australia, giving our community equal access to Triple Zero (000) for the first time in history.
To help you get started, we've created two short step-by-step demo videos for iPhone and Android.
Each video will show you how to download the app, open it for the first time, and get ready to make an emergency call with a NAATI qualified Auslan interpreter.
To find out more about the app and to watch the video, head to the AEI App webpage.
Preventing Heat Stress in Older People
Below is some useful information, provided by MidCoast Council, regarding the effects of heat on older people,
With rising temperatures, summer is a time of higher heat-related risk for older people. For aged care providers and workers, now is the time to prepare for the heat, and take steps to stop heat-related illness. Heat causes more people to die each year in Australia than any other natural hazard. When heatwaves occur, the death toll routinely reaches into the hundreds.
People over 65 are at highest risk from the heat
Older people’s bodies don’t cope with sudden stresses as quickly or as well as younger people’s bodies. For example, an older person’s skin doesn’t sweat and cool the body down as efficiently as a younger person’s does. Heat-related illness can get worse very quickly in older people. This can lead to rapid clinical deterioration (a fast decline in their health) and even death. That’s why it’s important to recognise and respond to heat-related illness in older people early and urgently. Look out for these signs:
- a sudden rise in body temperature
- confusion or altered mental state
- seizures
- nausea and vomiting
- loss of consciousness
- a weak, rapid pulse.
If you see any of these signs it’s a medical emergency that requires immediate first aid to cool the person down and a call to emergency services. Heat stress can also make existing health conditions worse. This includes conditions that are common in older people, such as diabetes, kidney disease and heart disease. Many heat deaths are recorded as heart attacks.
Other risk factors in the heat
Older people are already more at risk of heat-related illness, but in particular those who:
- are frail or have a low body mass – they can heat up more easily have dementia – they may not plan well, remember to drink regularly or realise they’re getting hot
- have difficulty staying hydrated – for example, people:
- with modified diets (including thickened fluids)
- on restricted fluids
- taking medications to reduce fluid retention
- have mobility problems and other physical challenges – for example, people who can’t:
- move into the shade or a cooler space by themselves
- remove their own clothing or bedding layers when they feel hot.
Know your environment and how the temperature changes
Residential aged care providers need to know about environmental risks in their facilities' buildings such as:
- indoor areas in care homes that can't be air conditioned or easily cooled
- indoor areas where the sun shines through the glass
- outdoor areas that change from shade to full sun during the day
- outdoor areas that are hidden from view.
Providers should ensure that residents are not left for prolonged periods in these areas where temperatures fluctuate over the day.
Workers at residential aged care homes should always:
- know and monitor the temperatures in different parts of the home and its outdoor areas
- know where residents are at all times
- make sure people are wearing suitable clothing for the conditions.
Fluid intake and preventing dehydration
Fluid intake and hydration are important because they help regulate body temperature, support organ function, maintain blood pressure and prevent dehydration. For an older person, their body may not signal thirst as effectively.
When it’s warm, remind your workers to:
- monitor vulnerable people and make sure they have enough fluids
- encourage people to drink fluids more often
- know the signs of dehydration, such as:
- dry mouth and tongue
- heat rash
- going to the toilet less often or having less heavy continence pads
- urgently attend to older people who say they’re hot or thirsty, or who look like they are
- offer people lukewarm (not cold) sponging or showering to help them cool down
- remind people to wear sunscreen, hats and protective clothing if they could be in the sun and help them to do this
- keep people out of the sun – particularly older people who might not want to come back inside when encouraged to do so.
Providing home care in the heat:
Home care providers face unique challenges compared to residential aged care homes when it comes to monitoring older people during heat, such as:
- less frequent monitoring – home care workers may only visit once or a few times a day
- limited environmental control – each older person’s home will be different and some may lack air conditioning or proper ventilation
- reliance on the older person – they may forget to drink, close curtains or turn on cooling devices.
This makes it harder for workers to monitor an older person and detect signs of dehydration or heat stress.
Home care providers should:
- have a heat action plan for each vulnerable person. This should include:
- strategies for reducing their exposure to extreme heat
- information about who to contact if they become unwell and need medical attention.
- Make sure that the people you care for:
- spend as little time as possible outside during extreme heat events
- wear the right clothing for the conditions
- have access to enough fluids, such as water
- have cooling devices that work and are switched on. If they don’t have air conditioning, a fan blowing with a wet sheet or towel in front of it (not over it) can also work well.
- Educate workers how to:
- recognise signs of heat-related illness
- respond in an emergency
- provide first aid for heat stress, dehydration and heat stroke.
Home care providers must make sure people are clinically assessed, if there are any signs that their health is getting worse.
If you’re concerned about an older person’s wellbeing in a heatwave, you should act.
Depending on how concerned you are, you should call:
- a family member
- the person’s general practitioner (GP) or another medical professional
- emergency services (triple zero [000]).
Dr. Mandy Callary
Chief Clinical Advisor

