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Government accused of dragging its feet over bid to tackle elder abuse

Posted: 01 July 2004 | Subscribe Online


The government is being urged to tear up its response to the health select committee inquiry into elder abuse and start again.

Action on Elder Abuse said the lacklustre reaction indicated a failure to "hear or fully understand the difficulties and shortfalls within the current systems".

Chief executive Gary FitzGerald said the response "fails to listen to or value the regulators, service providers, charities and trade unions who invested so much time and energy in making considered submissions on this important issue".
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He added that the government had not done justice to many of the 40 recommendations made by the select committee. All bar one of the measures to improve protection mentioned in the government press statement accompanying the response, such as establishing the Commission for Social Care Inspection and minimum standards, were implemented before the select committee inquiry was even set up.

Age Concern's director general, Gordon Lishman said it was a "bitter disappointment" that the government had taken the view that the existence of advice and helplines was an adequate response to the select committee's call for advocacy.

"Increased advocacy would have encouraged more older people to report cases of abuse," Lishman said.

While the select committee raised concerns about inadequacies in regulation, the government said it would discuss this with the Commission for Social Care Inspection only. It also stood by current training of care assistants, despite criticism from the select committee.
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The committee also feared that older people were being placed at "continuing risk" from daily contact with unregistered care workers. However, the government said decisions on which groups took priority for registration were made by the General Social Care Council.

It added that the introduction of the Protection of Vulnerable Adults scheme later this month, and the domiciliary care agencies' regulations and national minimum standards, should reassure the committee that older people in their own homes had a high level of protection.

The government argued that it had also taken steps to address the problem of incorrect prescription of medication within care homes, including providing financial incentives for GPs to review prescribed medicines.


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