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Bathing is not an ‘essential activity’ for disabled in council care, watchdog finds

Posted: 13 August 2004 | Subscribe Online


A disabled homeless man was denied access to a bath for 17 months because social services did not consider bathing to be an “essential activity”, according to a report by the Local Government Ombudsman, writes Craig Kenny.

The case is one of 61 highlighted in a digest published last week, taken from a total of 19,000 complaints made to the ombudsman last year.

The report tells of a wheelchair user, Mr Johnson, who became homeless after a divorce and was placed in a hostel without disabled access to bathing facilities.

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A community occupational therapist had advised the council that the hostel was suitable because, “according to social services criteria, bathing was not an essential activity unless there was an identified medical need”, it says.

Finding maladministration, the Ombudsman said that this would not be the view of most people.

In another case a homeless single father was charged £23 a week extra for having furniture in his temporary accommodation. He had agreed to the charge while it was paid for by housing benefit, but refused to pay it himself once he found a job.

The council was criticised for its inflexible charging policy, which the ombudsman considered “irrational and unlawful”.
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In a third case, a Mrs Baker was threatened with having her application to foster a third child withdrawn unless she apologised for being rude to a council officer on the phone.

Noting that no record of the disputed phone call had been kept by the council, the ombudsman found that threatening to withdraw Baker’s application had been a “harsh and wholly disproportionate response”.

2003/04 digest from www.lgo.org.uk/digest.htm

 

 



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