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Lib Dems round on Department of Health as 'institutionally ageist'

Posted: 26 February 2004 | Subscribe Online


The Department of Health was slammed last week as institutionally ageist.

The claim was made by the Liberal Democrats' health spokesperson who said there was a long way to go to tackling abuse of older people and ageist attitudes in society and the Department of Health.

Paul Burstow told an Age Concern conference in Birmingham that the DoH "not only tolerates lower standards in care homes for the elderly compared with those for children and disabled adults but actually set those standards".
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The MP called the lack of research in the field "a scandal" - the most recent report was published in 1992 - and urged the government to commission a study to gauge elder abuse.

The government's approach to the issue had been the No Secrets guidance, which provides a framework for developing multi-agency codes of practice. Although its implementation was essential if elder abuse was to be detected and tackled, it was "not sufficient to address the underlying causes".

Burstow urged there to be a joint inspection of the implementation of No Secrets by the Commission for Social Care Inspection and other government agencies, along similar lines as the Safeguarding Children review published last year.

Meanwhile, Liberal Democrat leader Charles Kennedy warned that the care home market was a "timebomb". He told the launch of the Friends of the Elderly annual review: "The pressure is building. It would not take much for the sector to move from break-even to breakdown."
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He said the reduction in capacity was forcing older people to move into care homes "hundreds of miles away from their own communities and families" which could cause depression and isolation and affect health.

He also called on the government to reverse its policy of means-testing those with Alzheimer's disease and dementia to see whether they were eligible for free nursing care, and pledged the Liberal Democrats would make all personal and nursing care free if elected.

There is a need for streamlining the "bewildering array" of bodies that provide services for older people, Kennedy added. "People need a one-stop-shop so that they know where to turn for advice rather than battle through all this."


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