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Government casts doubt on level of elder abuse claimed by campaigners

Posted: 29 January 2004 | Subscribe Online


The government looks set to carry out research into the abuse of older people after community care minister Stephen Ladyman questioned the scale of the problem.

Speaking at last week's health committee inquiry hearing into elder abuse, Ladyman admitted that there was a "significant problem", but said suggestions that 500,000 people a year were suffering from elder abuse were "unhelpful" because the definitions used were too broad.

He said the government was "very interested" in a proposal from campaign group Action on Elder Abuse to carry out a two-year study to identify how many older people are suffering abuse. He said a decision on whether to go ahead with the study would be taken shortly.
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The proposal involves testing Action on Elder Abuse's definition of abuse - broken down into five levels of severity - against data collected by local authority adult protection teams on recorded incidents of abuse. It will look at what action was taken and what the outcome was, and aim to develop a national recording system for incidents.

Ladyman said that the 500,000 figure included "innocuous" things such as raised voices, "which should not be counted as abuse in my book".

He said the department's definition included physical, sexual and financial abuse, and verbal abuse that led to loss of self-esteem.

During the hearing, Deidre Hine, chairperson of the Commission for Health Improvement, said there was a "general problem" in care homes over the use of sedatives on older people.

"I'm sorry to say that the medical profession has given far too little attention to the sophistication and complexity of this." She said clinicians needed to have better training on the reactions of drugs and on assessing the need for continually reviewing patients' drug regimes.
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Chairperson of the National Care Standards Commission Anne Parker revealed that less than half of care homes met national minimum standards on administering medication correctly to older people.

NCSC inspections of care homes last year found that 45 per cent met the standard, with just 1 per cent exceeding it.

However, of those that failed to meet the standards, 42 per cent were for minor infringements.

"I'd expect to see a significant number of those that almost met the standards moving into that category next year," she said.


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