Elderly care: Your views
Page 1 of 1
Elderly care: Your views
a nurse attending to an elderly patient
The NHS is failing to treat elderly patients in England with care, dignity and respect, an official report says.
The Health Service Ombudsman which deals with serious complaints against the NHS, found that after carrying out an in-depth review of 10 cases, patients - aged over 65 - suffered unnecessary pain, neglect and distress.
BBC News website readers have been speaking about their experiences of elderly care in hospital.
Julie Appleby, carer and former RAF medic, Wrexham, North Wales
Continue reading the main story
“Start Quote
None of the staff said anything about my helping the patients because they weren't around a lot of the time”
End Quote
My father was admitted to hospital several years ago and sadly went into a coma two days later - not the fault of the hospital.
However I could see that there was not enough staff on the ward and that really concerned me. So I decided to stay with him for the two weeks at the hospital - sleeping at night on a chair at his bedside - until he sadly died.
The lack of basic care was rife not just with my father but with other patients too.
I used to help out some of the other patients on a regular basis by handing them water, helping them to eat, and just helping them to get off the bed onto a chair.
None of the staff said anything about my helping the patients because they weren't around a lot of the time.
It was extremely upsetting as I have worked in the NHS myself and it all seems to have gone downhill and backwards.
Basic cleaning was another problem I saw. When I worked in this environment as an RAF medic in the 80s, there was a basic daily cleaning regime.
This was not done for the whole two weeks I was at the hospital.
After my father passed away, I even felt guilty that I was leaving the other patients on the ward.
Keith Kettlewell, former NHS nurse, Bristol
Keith Kettlewell Keith said he was not shocked by the findings and always felt like "a voice crying in the wilderness"
I was a hospital nurse for 42 years until I retired. I trained as a state-registered nurse and a state-registered psychiatric nurse.
When I started nursing there was an ethos of care in the very bones of the nursing profession. It was in the culture of the old nursing profession that care was really from cradle to grave. Everyone was treated as human beings, with respect.
Nowadays, the main problem with elderly care is nearly always the nursing staff, and not with the actual medical attention they receive.
At some stage, the attitude amongst youngsters changed about a generation ago. It has been my experience that many young nurses do not find elderly patients "attractive" and will avoid them if they possibly can.
There are some wonderful, caring, intelligent people working for the NHS who will help older people, but what bothers me is that there is a significant number who don't. These people have so much power in their hands, they can inflict untold misery - physically, mentally, emotionally.
So I wasn't shocked at all about these findings - I've known this for the last decade but I always felt like I was like a voice crying in the wilderness.
I think we really need to recognise that there is a problem, and not try to pretend that it's not there. We have to face up to the facts.
Home Warranty
Speed up Wordpress
Mr007- Posts : 267
Join date : 2011-03-01
Similar topics
» Where the NHS is getting care wrong for elderly patients
» NHS 'must improve care of elderly surgery patients'
» NHS 'failing to treat elderly with care and respect'
» Views wanted on walks from funicular to Cairn Gorm peak
» 'My mother suffered appalling care for a fractured hip'
» NHS 'must improve care of elderly surgery patients'
» NHS 'failing to treat elderly with care and respect'
» Views wanted on walks from funicular to Cairn Gorm peak
» 'My mother suffered appalling care for a fractured hip'
Page 1 of 1
Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum