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News


Amnesty International launches public inquiry campaign on care home Covid response


Amnesty International has launched a campaign calling for an inquiry on care homes after a report claimed residents were abandoned to die during the early stages of the pandemic.


The campaign urges a full independent public inquiry into the pandemic, with an interim phase starting immediately focusing on older people in care homes, after it found a series of “shockingly irresponsible” government decisions led to “multiple violations of residents’ human rights”. The pressure group’s ‘As If Expendable:


The UK Government’s Failure to Protect Older People in Care Homes during the Covid-19 Pandemic’ report found managers and staff said they were left without guidance, PPE or access to testing. Other key failings identified in the report include decisions to discharge thousands of untested hospital patients into care homes and “misuse” of Do Not Attempt Resuscitation (DNAR) forms. Care home managers reported to Amnesty cases of local GP surgeries or Clinical Commissioning Groups requesting that they


should insert DNAR forms into the files of residents as a blanket approach. The report claims a group of six


Sussex CCGs issued DNAR guidance on 23 March to 35 GP surgeries and 98 care homes. The document instructed all practices to: ‘Search your clinical system for any care home


patients who do not have a resuscitation order recorded (either ‘not for’ or ‘for’ resuscitation) and put appropriate orders in place’. The investigation by the human rights


group’s Crisis Response team received multiple reports of care home residents’ right to NHS services - including access to general medical services and hospital admission - being denied during the pandemic. Care home staff and relatives told Amnesty how sending residents to hospital was discouraged or outright refused. Amnesty also received multiple reports


right across the country of doctors refusing to enter care homes and only being available for consultations by phone or video call, regardless of a sick resident’s symptoms or even in the case of end-of-life support. In addition to a public inquiry, the human


Prime Minister hints at insurance-style model for social care funding reform


Prime Minister Boris Johnson hinted at an insurance-style model of funding as he reiterated the Conservative election manifesto promise to fix social care during his keynote party conference speech. Johnson said during his virtual speech that


the government will use the “magic of averages to the rescue of millions” to reform social care. The Prime Minister did not elaborate on his


statement but economist Sir Andrew Dilnot, who has proposed a £45,000 cap on social care costs, has previously used the term in relation to Winston Churchill’s 1911 speech in


support of social insurance scheme to cover unemployment and sickness. Johnson said the government would “do


what all governments have shirked for decades” and find a solution for care funding. “Covid has shone a spotlight on the difficulties of that sector in all parts of the UK, and to build back better we must respond. We will fix the injustice of care home funding. We will care for the carers as they care for us.” Johnson also said the government would


continue to recruit 50,000 more nurses and confirmed plans to build 40 new hospitals.


Morris Care has opened the Radbrook Garden Suite, an exclusive new wing of its Radbrook nursing home in Shrewsbury. The garden suite will provide luxury accommodation for ten new residents. The ensuite bedrooms have exclusive use of private lounges on ground and first floors, with complimentary food and drinks available throughout the day for family and residents.


November 2020 • www.thecarehomeenvironment.com 9


rights organisation’s campaign is calling on the government to order a thorough review of DNAR forms in care home residents’ care plans and medical files to ensure they were not imposed without due process. Amnesty is also urging the government to


ensure care home residents have full access to the NHS services to which they are entitled, make regular testing available to visitors, as well as to care home residents and staff; and ensure that guidelines for visits put the best interests of residents. “The government made a series of shockingly irresponsible decisions which abandoned care home residents to die. Discharged without being tested, thousands of older people were sent to care homes at great risk to themselves and other residents and to staff,” said Amnesty International UK director Kate Allen. “The appalling death toll was entirely


avoidable - it is a scandal of monumental proportions. As the country faces a second wave of coronavirus, we urgently need a full independent public inquiry into the care home scandal, so that lessons can be learned and lives protected, before any more lives are lost,” she added.


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