Tag Archives: family

BETRAYAL OF FAMILY CARERS WHO LOOK AFTER THE ELDERLY

 

Carers UK chief executive Helena Herklots rapped failings

Monday September 17,2012

By Sarah O’Grady

FAMILY carers who bear the brunt of failures in the home care service are at risk of illness and poverty, a devastating report reveals today.

It shows that as standards decline pensioners cared for in their own homes are being left all day to cope without food or drink.

The study also warns that serious failings in the care of the elderly is leaving vulnerable people subject to cruel or incompetent treatment.

‘Joey has opened my eyes’

Joey has just celebrated his 16th birthday but unlike his peers who’d have stayed up late partying, he went to bed early. His father describes the challenges – and joys – of raising a boy with profound, multiple learning difficulties

 

Stephen Unwin and his son: ‘Joey has opened my eyes to another way of thinking about human beings.’ Photograph: Christian Sinibaldi for the Guardian

Some people would say that my second son is stupid. I understand what they mean. But it’s a word that I’ve come to use less casually than most. Just a few days before the opening ceremony for the Paralympic Games, he had a pretty significant birthday. But while most boys would have celebrated turning 16 by tasting the forbidden fruits of adult life and drinking too much cheap cider, Joey blew out the candles on his birthday cake with a giggle of excitement, jumped up and down with pleasure unwrapping the presents he’d been given and went to bed – entirely sober – at 7pm.

Because, you see, Joey is very different from most 16-year-olds. He has profound and multiple learning difficulties. His condition is still undiagnosed, although it’s almost certainly the result of a genetic glitch. He’s an attractive boy, with a shock of brilliant blond hair and a dazzling smile. But he’s very small, sometimes painfully thin and suffers from severe epilepsy. His coordination is poor and he’s extremely timid. He’s terribly vulnerable and when the epilepsy is bad, he’s pitiful. Most significantly, he has very restricted cognitive abilities and only a limited understanding of what is going on around him. He communicates in rudimentary Makaton sign language (and makes noises with a clear commitment to what he wants) but has never uttered a single word: not “mum”, not “dad”, nothing. What at first was termed “developmental delay” is now quite clearly a profound and serious learning disability.

Daughter angry about closure of Norfolk dementia care unit

A concerned daughter has blasted Norfolk County Council’s plans to close a dementia unit in Blofield which she says has made a huge difference to her mother’s life.

David Freezer Wednesday, September 5, 2012
9:20 AM

A concerned daughter has blasted Norfolk County Council’s plans to close a dementia unit in Blofield which she says has made a huge difference to her mother’s life.

 

Allison Little, from Neatishead, is unhappy with the county council’s reasoning for closing the Stocks Lane Day Centre in Blofield – which, as reported in Saturday’s Norwich Evening News, is due to happen this autumn.

Ms Little’s 82-year-old mother, also from Neatishead, attends the day centre five days a week as she has Alzheimer’s disease.