Westmeath Family Carer of the Year announced
Lorraine Dunning Rafferty has been named as this year's Netwatch Westmeath Family Carer of the Year.
The countywide recognition for Lorraine was announced by Family Carers Ireland, the national charity supporting Ireland’s family carers, at an event in the Annebrook House Hotel, Mullingar.
Lorraine cares for her husband Anthony, who has muscular dystrophy and is a wheelchair user. Together, they live with their two sons in Athlone.
Family Carers Ireland said Lorraine supports Anthony's daily needs with unwavering dedication, from small routines to essential care tasks, while also working part time and caring for her elderly father.
Her compassion extends beyond her family, and recently she led a charity climb of Croagh Patrick, raising more than €10,000 for Muscular Dystrophy Ireland’s accessible 'home away from home' apartment in Dublin, a retreat for families like hers.
A wonderful wife, mother, sister and friend, Lorraine is known for her willingness to help and support Anthony in every way.
Her friends and colleagues say that she is always "a pleasure to be around".
Now in their 17th year, the awards seek to honour all family carers and to highlight the need for greater recognition and support of those who go above and beyond in caring for their loved ones, often without state support, including appropriate financial compensation, respite and vital therapies for loved ones.
There are 500,000 family carers in Ireland caring for children or adults with additional needs, physical or intellectual disabilities, frail older people, those with palliative care needs or those living with chronic illnesses, mental health challenges or addiction.
Family carers provide 19 million hours in unpaid work each week. If the state were to seek to replace that, it would cost €20 billion a year.
Amy Kelly, local community support manager with Family Carers Ireland, said: "Each year, the Netwatch Family Carer of the Year awards remind us of the role that family carers play in our society and shine a light on the work that they do, which is often unseen and unrecognised.
"As a society, we must do much more to ensure that family carers are properly recognised, valued and supported to care safely for their loved ones at home," said Ms Kelly.