Tag Archives: Older care

More compassion and help is needed for the people who do the caring!

Cameron wants care and compassion? He’d do well to show some himself

It’s the norm now for the people who clean up after others to be unimportant, poorly paid and denied rights. That’s got to change

Gloria Foster death

Gloria Foster, pictured here on her wedding day, who died earlier this month after lying alone for nine days due to care agency failure. It’s about cultural values versus economic ones, writes Deborah Orr

It may have been the “apparently high mortality rates in patients admitted as emergencies” that prompted the first of many investigations into Stafford Hospital. But it’s the reports of bedridden patients lying in their own urine and excrement that illustrate the depth of the “systemic failure” at the hospital. Because everybody knows that isn’t right. You need no training – medical or otherwise – no management expertise or experience, no special “vocation” or long-honed skill, to understand that you don’t do that to animals, let alone humans.

And that, in a nutshell, is the problem. Our intensely hierarchical economic system runs on specialisation – the attainment of qualifications, the accumulation of experience, the possession of skill, talent, instinct, flair, ruthlessness, the ability to manage or make money, all wrapped up in a bundle that makes an individual special and unique. So the things that all humans are expected to comprehend, and be able to turn their hand to, have no value.

I’m not just talking about the NHS. Of course, hospitals contain concentrated numbers of people who can’t get to the loo by themselves, and a lack of cleanliness can and does have sometimes fatal consequences. So the general failure to reward “menial” tasks is particularly egregious in hospitals.

Norman Lamb MP responds to the Francis Report

Norman Lamb MP writes…The government will act in response to the Francis Report

By | Thu 7th February 2013 – 10:34 am

Over the course of four years at Mid Staffordshire hospital, hundreds of patients suffered from appalling neglect and mistreatment. Relatives that voiced concerns were ignored; staff that tried to speak up were silenced. It was a shocking betrayal of trust of patients and their families.

Yesterday Robert Francis QC published his report into the Mid Staffordshire NHS Foundation Trust. The public inquiry lasted more than two years, heard over 250 witness statements, considered over one million pages of documentary evidence, and has produced a report nearly two thousand pages long. It makes 290 separate recommendations.

The story of Mid Staffs, the report says, is one of “terrible and unnecessary suffering of hundreds of people who were failed by a system which ignored the warning signs of poor care and put corporate self interest and cost control ahead of patients and their safety.” The overriding message is the need for a culture change across the NHS to make sure that patients always come first.

This will shake your ideas about responsibility – very moving

A Life Beyond Dementia

http://youtu.be/PCi65x07vRw

 

Published on Feb 1, 2013

Throughout the world, families? lives are changed immeasurably as a consequence of DEMENTIA. But as with all aspects of our seemingly complex lives, things are not what they seem. It has always been possible to see the very same circumstance through the depth of a wiser gaze.

Lives are transformed through such a gaze. My hope is that Olga?s experience will change the very sight you place on your own circumstance. And in doing so, change your circumstance.

You can see many more Soul Biographies and download this film for free from http://soulbiographies.com/