Complex Care
Pride Health and Social Care provides a support service informed by Registered Nursing senior experience, with additional on-hands senior nursing support, to enable individuals with complex physical health conditions to be supported at home by teams of experienced support workers.
Our senior management team, nursing team and support workers have a wealth of combined knowledge, professional expertise and community experience across a wide range of clinical conditions/issues, including:
- Gastrostomy and stoma management
- Ventilation and tracheostomy management
- Complex continence (bowel and bladder) needs
- Acquired brain and spinal cord injuries
- Neurological conditions, including muscular dystrophy and motor neurone disease
As well as physical healthcare complexities, we can also support autistic individuals with, or without, a diagnosed learning disability who present with complex care needs associated with their behaviour, and wider areas of need, which necessitate a need for skilled support to support an individual to lead their best life in the community and help to meet identified needs.
Our service offers face-to-face assessments and handpicks support workers who are carefully matched to meet your specific needs. Our initial clinical assessments guarantee a high level of transparency and clinical risk evaluation and provide a basis for training our support workers. Our nursing/management team oversee these and ensure continuity and coordination of care by facilitating effective partnerships between you, your family and your support workers.
What really sets our nursing care team apart is their passion for delivering care to individuals whose needs may perhaps otherwise be deemed too complex to support at home. We work collectively with a wider network of community services to build expert teams to support you.
If you would like to refer yourself, or someone you are aware of, to the Pride Team, please use our ‘Contact Us’ form and a member of the team will get back to you as soon as possible.



