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Inspectors accused of leniency towards residential care homes

Posted: 09 October 2003 | Subscribe Online


The National Care Standards Commission is being too soft on care home owners whose staff neglect residents, Action on Elder Abuse's chief executive told a fringe meeting.

Gary Fitzgerald warned delegates that the NCSC was "colluding" with care homes during inspections rather than closing down those where abuse had taken place. He is also "concerned that the NCSC is not making an impact" and that "it might be part of the problem".

He said: "When an elderly resident has a grade five sore, why is the NCSC working with the care home to improve [it] and not closing it down?"
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The NCSC confirmed that it preferred to "work with people to improve practice rather than shut a home down".

"It is important we don't go in there with both feet," a spokesperson told Community Care. "We're in the business of people receiving good quality servicesÉbut this year we are going to be focusing a lot more on inspections and taking appropriate enforcement action."

Fitzgerald has put his weight behind the campaign by the Community District Nursing Association for mandatory training for all domiciliary care staff in identifying and managing signs of elder abuse.
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He added that there was a need for a national register of domiciliary workers who had been convicted of abuse.

"Older people are at the bottom of the pile. At the rate of current capacity [of the General Social Care Council register] we are looking at 10 years before we get domiciliary workers registered," Fitzgerald said.


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