Author Archives: wendy

Flea bite gets carers banned from helping OAP

By DAN SALES
Published: 1 hr ago

HEALTH and safety jobsworths banned carers from helping a wheelchair-bound OAP after one got bitten by a FLEA.

Jean Jordan, 78, was abandoned after Essex County Council officials made the bizarre ruling.

Authorities made the move after one carer complained they were bitten by the mite at Jean’s house.

It means the pensioner, who dislocated her shoulder two years ago, has been without care for five days.

She needs helpers to assist with washing and dressing her.

Jean’s son Nigel blasted the council for refusing to do more.

He said: “It’s disgusting the way they have treated my mother.

“How can they say it was a flea bite from this house? I’ve tidied all the rooms and sprayed flea killer but I don’t think there have been any here.

“It could have been a fly or a mosquito bite from anywhere, especially in this weather.”

Who cares? Support for carers of people approaching the end of life

The Government’s first national survey of end of life care experiences revealed that only half of the sons, daughters, partners, siblings, parents and friends caring for a dying person receive the help they need

Holiday Inn Regents Park, London, W1W 5EE, United Kingdom


Overview

Why this conference?

The Government’s first national survey of end of life care experiences revealed that only half of the sons, daughters, partners, siblings, parents and friends caring for a dying person receive the help they need. The needs of unpaid carers are too often overlooked or left unmet by ‘the system’. This can have a devastating impact on people’s experience of caring and bereavement. It also makes it difficult, if not impossible, to achieve the Government’s ambition of allowing more people to be cared for and die in their preferred place, which is usually at home. A home death can put enormous pressure on carers on a 24/7 basis.

This national conference, organised by leading charities, explores the needs of carers of people approaching the end of life and some of the particular issues, concerns and dilemmas that accompany this stage of caring. It will look at how the national End of Life Care Strategy (DH, 2008) and Carers Strategy (2008) can be brought together and, by showcasing good practice examples, how they can be translated into a reality on the ground.

Councils urged to replace social workers with non-qualified staff

Money can be saved without hurting quality if councils with high spending on assessments and reviews used more non-professionally qualified staff instead of social workers, says Audit Commission.

Savings of £300m could be made on assessments, the commission says

Mithran Samuel
Thursday 23 August 2012 00:01

Councils have been urged to replace social workers with non-professionally qualified staff in assessments and reviews, on the grounds this can save money without hurting quality.

The recommendation comes in a report today from the Audit Commission, which found that £180m-£310m a year could be saved from annual adult social services spending in England – about 1% to 2% of the total – if councils with relatively high spends on assessments and reviews reduced their costs towards the level of lower spenders.

The biggest potential area of saving was from “changing the mix of staff grades and skills that councils employ” to carry out assessments, by replacing social workers and occupational therapists with social work or OT assistants or other staff without professional qualifications.