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This business is part of Archer Villages & Care Homes.
The Archer website states that Thorrington Home - formerly called Santa Maria Rest Home - in Christchurch (which is part of the Archer | Thorrington Lifestyle Village) comprises of a rest home and a "Memory Support" Neighbourhood, commonly known as a Dementia Care Unit.
It also says that Archer are registered to the internationally acclaimed "Eden Alternative" model of care. This holistic approach to a residents care also includes resident-centred or person-centred approach to care.
Thorrington Rest Home and Dementia Care is part of the Archer Group of Villages and Aged Care in Christchurch.
No. of Beds 53
(Last Updated: 2nd September 2024)
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Archer Thorrington Care Home
Canterbury District Health Board
Audit Certification period: 36 months (Good)
Certificate renewal date: 9th June, 2025
Auditor: BSI Group New Zealand Ltd
Click here to view latest audit findings
All rest homes and aged residential care facilities are certified and audited to ensure they:
Certification / Surveillance Audits
Certification audits happen every 1–4 years. After the audit, rest homes are certified for a set period of time (the exact length depends on how well the rest home performed at the certification audit). Once this time is up, the rest home must be re-audited and its certification renewed.
An unannounced spot audit (also called a surveillance audit) happens around the middle of a rest home’s certification period. The spot audit ensures progress has been made on outstanding areas identified in the earlier certification audit and that standards haven’t slipped.
In addition to audits, rest homes have to report to their DHB on how they are addressing issues found at audit. These improvements are then verified at the next audit event.
Other types of audit
Provisional audits happen when a provider purchases a certified rest home from another provider.
Partial provisional audits happen when a provider wants to add services to their certificate (eg, a rest home adding hospital-level care), when a new rest home is built, or when a provider adds capacity or reconfigures their services (eg, builds a new wing, upgrades rooms). Before 2014, audits for adding capacity or reconfiguring services were referred to as verification audits.
Ministry inspections
Rest homes may have unannounced inspections by the Ministry under the Health and Disability Services (Safety) Act 2001 in the event of a serious complaint.
DHB issues-based audits
DHBs can conduct issues-based audits under the Aged Related Residential Care Contract. For information on these audits please contact the relevant DHB.