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Charity attacks 'rise' in 'disgraceful' short care visits | Charity attacks 'rise' in 'disgraceful' short care visits |
(35 minutes later) | |
Short care visits to elderly and disabled people are "disgraceful" and on the rise, a charity has claimed. | Short care visits to elderly and disabled people are "disgraceful" and on the rise, a charity has claimed. |
In England, 60% of councils use 15-minute visits, which are not long enough to provide adequate care Leonard Cheshire Disability says. | |
The charity says such visits can "force disabled people to choose whether to go thirsty or to go to the toilet". | The charity says such visits can "force disabled people to choose whether to go thirsty or to go to the toilet". |
But care managers insisted some short visits could be "fully justified and fully adequate". | But care managers insisted some short visits could be "fully justified and fully adequate". |
'30-minute minimum' | |
Leonard Cheshire is pushing for a ban on what it calls the "scandal of flying 15-minute visits", lobbying the government to outlaw the practice in England. | Leonard Cheshire is pushing for a ban on what it calls the "scandal of flying 15-minute visits", lobbying the government to outlaw the practice in England. |
A report published by the charity said short visits "simply do not allow enough time to deliver good-quality care". | |
It said data from 63 local authorities pointed to a 15% rise in such visits in the last five years, and said some in councils more than 75% of care visits were carried out in less than 15 minutes. | |
Chief executive Clare Pelham said visits should be at least 30 minutes long. | Chief executive Clare Pelham said visits should be at least 30 minutes long. |
"It is disgraceful to force disabled people to choose whether to go thirsty or to go to the toilet by providing care visits as short as 15 minutes long," she said. | |
Ms Pelham said most people need 40 minutes to get up, washed, dressed and have breakfast. | |
"We are treating disabled and older people as if they are robots to be serviced, rather than real people who deserve to be treated with kindness and consideration," she added. | |
But the Association of Directors of Adult Social Services (Adass), which represents care managers, argued it was "totally wrong" to suggest all caring tasks require more than 15 minutes. | |
Sandie Keene, the association's president, said some short visits were "fully justified and fully adequate". | Sandie Keene, the association's president, said some short visits were "fully justified and fully adequate". |
It was "frankly naive to believe that simply by abolishing 15-minute slots a magic wand will have been waved, and improvements automatically achieved in our care services," she added. | It was "frankly naive to believe that simply by abolishing 15-minute slots a magic wand will have been waved, and improvements automatically achieved in our care services," she added. |
"It doesn't work like that." | "It doesn't work like that." |
Ms Keene said social workers and their managers had to make "horrendously difficult choices" every day to give the best possible care with limited resources. | |
'Substantially underfunded' | 'Substantially underfunded' |
Leonard Cheshire wants peers to back a ban on short visits by amending the government's Care Bill when it is debated in the House of Lords on Wednesday. | |
The Local Government Association (LGA), pointed to a "substantially underfunded" social care service which was putting councillors under increasing pressure. | |
"Significant cuts to council funding mean local authorities are struggling to meet the rising demand for home care visits," said Katie Hall, chairwoman of the LGA's community and wellbeing board. | "Significant cuts to council funding mean local authorities are struggling to meet the rising demand for home care visits," said Katie Hall, chairwoman of the LGA's community and wellbeing board. |
She said 15-minute visits "should never be the sole basis for care", but added: "In some circumstances such as administering medication they can be appropriate, but only as part of a wider comprehensive care plan involving longer one-to-one visits." | She said 15-minute visits "should never be the sole basis for care", but added: "In some circumstances such as administering medication they can be appropriate, but only as part of a wider comprehensive care plan involving longer one-to-one visits." |
Leonard Cheshire Disability said a survey of 2,025 people found 93% of those who expressed an opinion agreed 15 minutes was "not long enough to support a disabled or older person to do everyday things like wash, dress and get out of bed in the morning". | Leonard Cheshire Disability said a survey of 2,025 people found 93% of those who expressed an opinion agreed 15 minutes was "not long enough to support a disabled or older person to do everyday things like wash, dress and get out of bed in the morning". |