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Campaigners sound alarm over plan to allow staff to work before checks

Posted: 11 March 2004 | Subscribe Online


Older people who use domiciliary care services face an increased risk of abuse if "cynical" plans to relax criminal records checks are introduced, Action on Elder Abuse has warned.

Last week, the Department of Health proposed scrapping rules that prevent new domiciliary care staff - along with care home and nursing agency staff - working until a Criminal Records Bureau check is completed.

The move follows pressure from care home owners, who have said the ban severely affects their ability to recruit staff (news, page 10, 18 September). Under the proposals, domiciliary care agency staff could begin work prior to completion of a CRB check if they have had three days' training.
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Gary Fitzgerald, chief executive of AEA, warned the proposals "have a level of complacency that borders on the ludicrous and the dangerous".

He said care staff with criminal convictions were already beating the checks - in one recent court case a worker had 14 convictions for fraud.

"There are 4,800 domiciliary care agencies and 80 per cent cannot meet the National Care Standards Commission's minimum standards. There will be direct abuse as a consequence of this," he added.

However, the plans were welcomed by independent care home owners.

Barry Hartley, vice-president of the National Care Homes Association, said the current system was seeing potential employees getting other jobs before checks came through. "A lot of people who work in our industry want the job now, not in four months' time."
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The DoH insists there would be no changes to the rules if loopholes were identified.

The consultation paper says that restrictions can only be lifted if a care provider risks operating with illegally low staffing levels.

But staff working with vulnerable clients would not be able to begin work prior to the completion of a Protection of Vulnerable Adults (Pova) check. As Pova checks are expected to take as long to process as CRB disclosures, the DoH is considering introducing interim Pova checks which would arrive within days.

- Consultation from www.dh.gov.uk/Consultations/LiveConsultations/fs/en


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