Author Archives: wendy

Discrimination ‘denying care home residents hospital access’, study suggests

Elderly people in care homes are being denied access to basic NHS services available to everyone because of discrimination, a major study suggests.

By John Bingham, Social Affairs Editor

6:40AM BST 29 Mar 2012

Analysis of the health records of more than 120,000 older people shows that those in residential care are significantly less likely to use their local hospital than those still living in their own homes.

When it comes to routine appointments, people in care homes are half as likely to visit their local hospital as the rest of the elderly population, research by the Nuffield Trust, a health think tank, shows.

The researchers said it could mean that their needs are being met in their care homes, avoiding the need to use hospitals, or that it shows “discrimination” against the elderly.

Paralympian Baroness Grey-Thompson suffers online abuse over train trouble

Baroness Grey-Thompson says she has attracted a stream of anti-disability abuse after she spoke of having to crawl off a train in London.

 

A newspaper website reporting the story prompted a large number of offensive comments about the peer’s disability.

“There’s a lot of disabled people who wouldn’t be able to deal with it the way I’m able to,” she said.

Social care service users feel excluded from reform debate

New research for the Joseph Rowntree Foundation asked about the state of the social care system and government reform plans

Social care service users have not got the ear of government, says Peter Beresford.

As the government finalises the social care white paper it plans to publish this spring, service users in a national consultation commissioned by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation have expressed major concerns both about the present state of social care and government proposals for the future.

There are growing fears among older and disabled people and other service users that their voices are not being heard at a time when major reforms in social policy that affect them in particular are taking place. While it is important not to overstate the case from the relatively small number of people consulted, they do represent a diverse range of adult social care service users from different areas in England.