Tag Archives: Older care
Target culture ‘knocks care out of nursing’
Target culture ‘knocks care out of nursing’ says expert as he warns workers are unable to stand up to abuse
- Professor Keith Brown criticises target-driven workplace culture
- He is currently overhauling training received by Britain’s care professionals
- Said that staff find it easier to ‘turn a blind’ to abuse in care homes
By John Stevens
PUBLISHED: 23:48, 1 January 2013 | UPDATED: 08:14, 2 January 201
A generation of nurses and carers have had their compassion ‘knocked out of them’ by a blindly target-driven workplace culture, an expert has warned.
An obsession with targets and jargon is stifling their innate desire to care for patients and care home residents, Professor Keith Brown said.
The professor, who is in the process of overhauling the training received by Britain’s care professionals, said many workers felt unable to stand up to abuse if they saw others mistreating patients.
He pointed to the example of the abuse scandal at the Winterbourne View private hospital in Bristol, which he said showed how those not perpetrating abuse had found it easier to ‘turn a blind eye’.
It’s never too late to be an advanced achiever
New year means a new you – and the age at which we are changing our lives is going up all the time. Jerome Taylor reports on the ‘advanced achievers’
Sunday 30 December 2012

After the fireworks come the resolutions. The new year is that time in our lives when we think about fresh horizons and greener pastures. But those who might be tempted to state that change is a young person’s game need to think again. With our maturing but increasingly healthy population, age should no longer be the thing that stops us trying out something new.
Take Srikumar Sen, a former boxing correspondent who, at the age of 81, has published his first work of fiction, a novel that has already won a literary award. Buoyed by the success of his debut, he has now at work on his second book.
Dame Joan Bakewell, the previous government’s voice for elder people and a critic of society’s lack of imagination when it comes to the country’s ageing population, says retirement is no longer about finding a hobby to keep you occupied. It is an opportunity to grab a new lease of life. “It’s enormously reinvigorating to find a new interest or activity as you grow older,” she says. “It stops you slowing down and getting stuck in a routine. It keeps people young and it opens up new friendships, gives people skills they perhaps didn’t know they had.” She adds: “Things are much more flexible and they’ve got to get more so. Our country has got to harness the skills of older people. Employers have got to get more flexible, use the skills that are there and keep old people young.”