Recently,
the Equalities Commission has released a report, organised conferences and
promoted interest in the question of care for the disabled and the aged. The recent raft of legislation and regulation
has made this necessary, together with a number of adverse reports on some care
homes and community care providers.
We are
being made aware that the difficulties in these areas have increased in recent
years. There are many reasons, one being
medical advances enabling the survival of many severely disabled people and
others together with the increasing expectation of life, and therefore care.
Initially,
in the UK
most of this was shifted out of private and local provision some time ago with
the creation of the National Health Services and with changing ideas. The old workhouses, geriatric wards, and asylums
were closed. For private options down the years, the
lodgings, guest houses and hotels with long term residents on annuities or
pensions have largely gone.
Then many
local authorities created residential homes for the elderly and disabled both
to keep them in their communities and in part to release housing for families
in their council houses. As the numbers rose
and the degree of care needed in individual cases become more demanding, so the
costs of resident care have risen
So we have
outsourcing of care to private providers together with a great deal of reliance
put on “care in the community”, that is delivered to the homes of the
individuals. This has become more and
more outsourced as the complexity increases.
This meant staff, rather than being located in one place, moved around
from home to home to deliver the necessary services.
Regulation
and enhanced health and safety requirements together with a great deal of
employment and other legislation have added to the costs and to the work to be
done at management and intermediary levels.
In and amongst all this there is a great deal to do that is apart from
and too often above actual care.
Then there
have been the twin curses of the cult of modern management coupled with the
intrusion of financial rent seeking extractive investors fastening on a sector
that can only grow and whose clients are both vulnerable and weak.
Management
by targets depends on the targets. If
the targets are driven by “efficient” daily routines and turnover and
throughputs then what is paramount to the accountants and the owners will take
precedence over the unpredictable and messy business of having to deal with
difficult patients on the ground.
Now we are
in a situation where for those in residential homes a large part of the sector
whose owners went in for high leverage lending for takeovers and speculation is
now in financial trouble and this has cascaded down into the quality and nature
of the work in the bedrooms and lounges of the homes.
Low paid
staff with little training and pressured to complete work and duties in ever
shorter periods of time cannot give the care, attention and medical awareness
to each and every resident. Their
laundry is skimped, their hygiene is forgotten and a few are left to lie until
the bed sores rot their bodies.
For too
many, the nutrition and food quality is bad and it is common for residents to
suffer at least mild and sometimes severe dehydration. The emotional effects of this are dealt with
by shoving increasing quantities of anti-depressants down their throats.
For those
remaining in their own homes there are many for whom it is an unending struggle
in which they are almost always defeated.
Again, even if the intent and hope is there many of the transient carers
have little or no time to spare to do anything other than the specified duties
on their task sheets.
Also, few
receive training at such a level as to make them aware of the first signs of
deterioration or onset of really serious problems in the people they try to
help. One key area here is those with
incipient dementia and another the little things that are mini-strokes or TIA’s
that signal danger.
The
consequence of this is when the inevitable happens for many there is too little
too late done and a crisis occurs. If a
Care Provider has rather too many people on its books, not enough carers and a
lot of people at risk, then their management may simply stagger from medical
crisis to medical crisis.
It is then
that the hospitals have to try to pick up the pieces, if they can or if they
are equipped too. One of our local
hospitals figures in the twelve with the highest proportion of patient
deaths. It is not a surprise given the
number and nature of the very elderly arriving in the emergency ambulances.
We now have
a report suggesting that too many hospitals are close to “bursting point”,
again no surprise, I always did feel that the official estimates for the future
demand for hospital treatments were wildly optimistic and removed from
realities. Over the last decade there
have been a couple of close calls, will this winter be the bad one?
All this
was beyond the capability of the NHS management system that has just been
discarded which was no better than the one it replaced. The new one that has been introduced, because
of its internal contradictions, seems certain to be overwhelmed in this
sector.
Because the
management systems are designed for management preoccupations they cannot cope
when complexity, where rapid medical decision making and treatment are
essential and thorough individual care facilities are needed. Nor is there any sight of what can be done
long term for individuals in need.
Of course,
the first priority is to meet all those big Private Finance Initiative bills
coming in both now and for decades to come.
What can we look forward to?
The Return
of the Workhouse?
"The consequence of this is when the inevitable happens for many there is too little too late done and a crisis occurs."
ReplyDeleteThat's my experience. When serious decline sets in, support is always late. Assessments are made, boxes are ticked, reports are written and by then the situation has worsened.
So care plans are out of date before they are implemented.
Of course back in the day, when granny got a bit old and doddery she moved in with her daughter, who would look after her for the rest of her life. No doubt this was hard and sometimes unpleasant but it provided a human aspect and nobody would treat their own parents (or even their own dogs) the way old folk get treated these days.
ReplyDeleteBut then we used to look after our own children too - as recently as when mine were young - but now we outsource that to various state agencies (if we're not stinking rich), so that we can all run faster in the hamster wheel.
Something's gone wrong somewhere.