Hospice cuddle beds help families share final moments

Andy HowardTaunton
News imageBBC Alison has light hair and is wearing a black and white polkadot top. She smiles at the camera with a 'cuddlebed' behind her. BBC
Alison Champion-Lewis used a "cuddle bed" when her late husband Rob was at St Margaret's Hospice

A hospice bought extra "cuddle beds" it offers patients, after a successful fundraising campaign highlighted their importance in end‑of‑life care.

Cuddle beds are extra‑wide, extendable hospice beds that allow partners or family members to lie side‑by‑side with patients, removing the physical barriers of traditional hospital beds.

St Margaret's Hospice in Taunton, Somerset, now has four cuddle beds on site, each costing £15,000, after previously offering two.

Alison Champion‑Lewis used a cuddle bed while her husband Rob was receiving end‑of‑life care at the hospice. "It was just fabulous to be together," she said.

News imageAlison Champion-Lewis Rob and Alison Champion-Lewis pose for a selfie photograph in a city centre. They are both smiling and Rob has sunglasses on his head. Alison Champion-Lewis
Alison and Rob had been married for eight months when he died in 2024

"In a normal hospital you're on the periphery of what's going on, you're told you can't sit on the bed, whereas this - you have that closeness, we could just be together."

Rob was a serving police officer when he was suddenly diagnosed with a brain tumour at the age of 54. Alison says the cuddle bed made a huge difference to the end of his life.

"He absolutely loved it. He'd say 'I just want you here with me', 'it's my happy place, just cuddling you.'"

"When Rob died I wasn't on the edge of it - I was in it. It was my goodbye, our goodbye."

News imageA picture of the 'cuddlebed' from the bottom end looking towards the pillows in at the far end. It has a digital display and controls to adjust the bed, with a coloured blanket on the white bedspread.
Each cuddlebed costs £15,000. St Margaret's Hospice now has four at its site in Taunton

Staff at St Margaret's Hospice said the beds play a vital role in helping patients feel like people rather than patients during their final days.

"I think it's the impact and understanding something as simple as a cuddle can do for somebody," said senior sister at St Margaret's Hospice, Anna Saunders.

"I think a cuddle is something that we very much take for granted, but knowing it made such a huge difference to both of them during that stay has has affected us as a team.

"I think it's also about dignity. From a patient's perspective they've gone from being a patient to being a human, and somebody loved."

News imageAnna Saunders has blonde hair and smiles at the camera in her blue uniform, with a 'cuddlebed' behind her.
Senior Sister at St Margaret's Hospice Anna Saunders said the cuddlebeds are absolutely vital to what the service they provide

Like many hospices across England, St Margaret's relies heavily on community fundraising to pay for specialist equipment not routinely covered by NHS funding.

Each cuddle bed costs £15,000 and while the hospice has doubled its number from two to four, the long‑term aim is to have one in every patient room.

"You just cannot underestimate the appreciation we have when people go out and fundraise," said Ms Saunders.

"I've been here for 10 years and even now that impact stays with me."

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