Category Archives: Carers

We get there early and find Dad's dementia worse

As Dad struggles to lift his head, it’s clear how immobile he’s become since last time

 

Rebecca Ley with her dad, who has dementia.

The second time I visited Dad over Christmas was far less rosy than the first. It was Boxing Day but decorations at the home had already begun to wilt. And this time, instead of finding Dad sitting in the main room cleanly shaven, my husband and I are told he is still in his bedroom.

I walk down the corridor with trepidation. His bedroom scares me. While many of the residents have cosy rooms, personalised by their families with photographs, lamps and cushions, Dad’s is a barren, institutional space.

It’s not that we haven’t tried. When he first moved in, my mum and sisters took pictures and got a television mounted on the wall. But none of it lasted long. Dad’s habit of destroying things in the night meant that nothing was safe. Now there’s just an empty bracket where the TV was, and the walls are blank, save for pockmarks and the odd, unidentifiable smear.

The focus of the room is his bed, a hospital one with bars to stop him slipping out. And today he’s lying in it, his head tilted to the window and his bare torso only just covered by a sheet.

Care charities ‘would be subject to new corporate abuse law’

A new offence of corporate neglect

Governance | Tania Mason | 17 Jan 2013

Care charities have lined up to support a proposed new law to hold care providers from all sectors – including charities – criminally accountable for neglect and abuse in hospitals and care homes.

Former care services minister Paul Burstow introduced a new Bill in Parliament yesterday that would amend the Health and Social Care Act 2008 to include a new offence of corporate neglect.  It attempts to ensure that abuse of the kind suffered by residents of the notorious Winterbourne View care home can never happen again.

Under the Bill, corporate bodies – whether private sector corporations, public sector entities, or charities – would face unlimited fines, remedial orders and publicity orders.  Such penalties mirror the sanctions introduced in the Corporate Manslaughter and Corporate Homicide Act 2007.

Disabled people 'could be forgotten' amid social care reform

A third of people getting social care are younger people with disabilities

By Nick Triggle Health correspondent, BBC News

Adults with disabilities in England are being deprived of basic care and support and are at risk of being forgotten in the wider reform of the social care system, campaigners say.

Much of the focus on care has been centred around the crisis facing the elderly.

But a coalition of charities has warned people with disabilities under the age of 65 are being neglected too.

They said the squeeze on council care meant many were already missing out.

And the groups, including Mencap, Scope, the National Autistic Society, Leonard Cheshire Disability and Sense, warned the situation could deteriorate under the forthcoming reform of the system.

Ministers are soon expected to announce a cap will be placed on the costs people face for care.