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Mind casts doubts on government claims of ending mixed-sex wards

Posted: 09 September 2004 | Subscribe Online


Almost one in four mental health in-patients are sleeping on mixed-sex wards, despite government claims to have almost eradicated the practice, according to mental health charity Mind.

In a survey of 416 current or recent psychiatric in-patients, 23 per cent said they had been accommodated in mixed-sex wards without private bedrooms.

In addition, almost a third did not have access to a single-sex bathroom or daytime facilities.

Last December, health minister Rosie Winterton announced that 99 per cent of all NHS trusts were providing single-sex wards for patients with planned admissions.
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But Mind said its survey showed that the government took a "tick-box approach" to enforcing national minimum standards.

More than a quarter of those surveyed said they rarely felt safe in hospital, and almost one in three felt that the environment they had to live in actually made their illness worse - a situation condemned by Mind as "appalling and absurd".

Incidents reported included being left in bedrooms with broken windows, having their room urinated in as they slept, or being dragged upstairs by nurses after being sick. Many patients said they had been bored in hospital. One complained that "smoking and television" were the only therapies on offer.

More than half had been threatened in hospital and 20 per cent reported actual assault. There were high rates of racial, homophobic and - in particular - sexual harassment, which in a third of cases were alleged to have been by members of staff. Only one in five felt they had been treated with dignity and respect by staff.
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Mind said NHS trusts varied widely on the management of violent behaviour, with some insisting upon zero tolerance while others accepted it as the norm. Fewer than half the patients had reported incidents to staff and only 11 per cent were satisfied with the action that staff took.

The Department of Health, however, insisted that its standards were properly checked and criticised Mind's survey as unrepresentative.

A spokesperson said that guidance had recently been published on improving safety, privacy and dignity of mental health patients and that more had been commissioned on the short-term management of disturbed or violent patients.


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