• No results found

Melissa Although Davey their father was in his eighties and living with Parkinson s disease

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2021

Share "Melissa Although Davey their father was in his eighties and living with Parkinson s disease"

Copied!
5
0
0

Loading.... (view fulltext now)

Full text

(1)

'Scratching the surface': the aged care stories that go

untold may be the worst

Sandra Nisi and her sister knew how aged care staff treated their father – because they put a hidden camera in his room

Melissa Davey

Sat 19 Oct 2019 06.00 AEDT

A

lthough their father was in his eighties and living with Parkinson’s disease and dementia in an aged care home, sisters Christine Lynch and Sandra Nisi said they knew his comments about being slapped and shaken were not just the confused ramblings of someone with degenerative diseases.

They believed him. Their story, told to the aged care royal commission in Melbourne on Tuesday, was one that illustrated the difference between aged care residents who have family members advocating for them and those who don’t.

“He would ramble about, you know, ‘I have to get the bus to go to work tomorrow’ or, you know, ‘I built that building over there’, things like that,” Nisi, one of his

daughters, told the commissioners. “But then amongst all that he would say, ‘That nurse slapped me’ and then he would talk about going to work and stuff like that. And then he would say someone shook him.”

For the past fortnight the commission has examined the treatment of some of the most vulnerable people in aged care as well as the workforce tasked with caring for them. Nisi told the commission that several distressing incidents occurred at the Greenway Gardens facility in Victoria, including allegations of staff failing to notice her father had a swollen and purple toe, not taking him to the toilet, which lead to him soiling himself, and leaving him hungry because he could no longer feed himself.

Nisi had thought things might improve once her father was transferred upstairs to the dementia ward, which seemed to have more staff, but she said there staff were even more overwhelmed.

After raising their concerns with staff, to no avail, Nisi and her sister installed a hidden camera in their father’s room. The footage was played for the royal

commissioners but the sisters did not want it made public. It revealed staff grabbing their father’s legs and ordering him to “stop shaking”, even though his Parkinson’s disease meant this was beyond his control. His shaking would also set off the night alarm, which she said would further irritate staff, with one of them telling him, “I’m sick of this”.

(2)

The footage also shows a staff member attempting to get their father out of bed using a lifting machine. When their father collapses, a staff member taps his face and, when he appears not to respond, puts him back to bed and walks away.

When Nisi and Lynch’s father was given a palliative care regime, they say none of the staff told them that this meant their father was dying and that they should prepare to say goodbye. A doctor wrote up a number of palliative medications to be given to relieve pain if needed.

“Sadly, however, the palliative care plan was never activated, and he was not

receiving palliative care at the time of his death,” counsel assisting the commission, Paul Bolster, said. Nisi and Lynch at times needed to pause to regain their composure as they told the commissioners of how their father rapidly deteriorated in his final weeks. They said the home could not even tell them his exact time of death.

After their father died and the sisters handed the footage over to the facility on a USB stick, they claim no action was taken. Lynch said she then took it to the CEO, who confirmed he had already seen the footage. The commission heard he later emailed her to tell her she had broken the law by installing the camera.

“He was more interested in our usage of the camera than what happened,” Lynch said. The staff who were shown to grab and shake their father were not fired, the commission heard.

Bolster told the commissioners these incidents “were just the tip of the iceberg”.

On Wednesday the royal commission heard about the pressures on staff in the aged care sector, who are commonly paid less than a checkout operator. Qualifications in the sector vary greatly, the commission heard. A worker in the home-care sector, Janice Hilton, said unregulated and untrained workers could “walk in off the street”

and into caring roles.

“There are a lot of fly-by-night providers starting businesses in the sector,” she said.

“There needs to be a closer look at these providers and penalties for people who break those codes or standards.”

Health Workers Union representative Lisa Alcock said staff endured being assaulted and sexually assaulted “on a weekly basis”.

“The two most critical pieces of feedback that we receive from members on a daily basis is the alarming rate of occupational violence, and that is just something you have to accept when you work in aged care,” she said. “The second is that the

incredibly low rate of pay is something that you have to similarly accept. It’s hard to accept because I feel that you can’t have a high quality of care if you have workers working poor and working them into poverty essentially.”

The commission heard this was exacerbated by the demands on staff, with one registered nurse being responsible for upwards of 50 patients, including high-care dementia patients.

(3)

“We’ve heard some evidence about graduate or first-year nurses coming in and being expected to run or be in charge of facilities, some even being referred to as clinical care managers,” Bolster said.

The commission was told this was particularly concerning given the added pressures expected on the system in the coming decades.

Sign up to receive the top stories from Guardian Australia every morning

The Australian Bureau of Statistics predicts that by 2050 the population of people aged between one and 18 will be 7.8m and the population of those aged 65 and over will be roughly the same. At the moment there are 5.5m people aged 18 and under, compared with 3.9m for the over 65s. This demographic shift will further imperil a struggling system. The aged care workforce is ageing, the commission has heard, struggling to retain existing staff or attract graduates to the sector.

Professor James Vickers, from the University of Tasmania’s Wicking Dementia Research and Education Centre said the ageing population would also be higher- need, with dementia to overtake heart disease as the leading cause of death of

Australians in about five years time. It is already the leading cause of death of women.

In order to avoid the poor care experienced by Lynch and Nisi’s father, Vickers told the commission: “We really need an emergency reaction to upskill the current health workforce working in aged care in dementia, and then we also need to make sure that we have relevant content in those health professional programs for people who will end up working with older people”.

The commission’s hearings coincided with the release of a report by Human Rights Watch titled Fading Away: How Aged Care Facilities in Australia Chemically Restrain Older People with Dementia. The report found aged care facilities routinely used drugs to control behaviour, a practice known as chemical restraint. Many of the drugs were not approved for use in people dementia and carried an increased risk of death.

The report is based on interviews with family members, doctors, nurses, and advocates, and documents the use of medications as chemical restraint in 35 aged care facilities.

An author of the report, Bethany Brown, said older people, and especially those with dementia, needed care and support, not restraint, even when they became agitated.

But this required having a skilled and supported staff.

“When someone’s rights are being violated the buck stops with the government to put in place a system that will prevent it from happening,” Brown said. “What we want to see is a prohibition on the use of chemical restraints in aged care and enough staff to help people and give them the support that they need. They should not be routinely given drugs for the convenience of staff. These drugs increase the risk of falls, of stroke and death, they change personalities. Their family members who often have power of attorney aren’t even being informed that these drugs are being given.”

(4)

Brown added that the Human Rights Watch report and even the royal commission were not necessarily hearing of the worst cases in aged care, because many of those abused had no one.

“We are scratching the surface,” she said. “We are seeing and hearing the experiences of the ones in aged care with loved ones checking in. And family and friends can find it hard to stand up to medical establishments, because they are fearful of

repercussions for their loved one in care.”

The royal commission hearings continue from 4 November in Mudgee, NSW.

Beyond Blue Support Service – phone 1300 224 636. The National Dementia Helpline – free call 1800 100 500. For other support services click here.

We will not stay quiet…

… on the escalating climate crisis. This is the Guardian's pledge: we will continue to give global heating, wildlife extinction and pollution the urgent attention and prominence they demand. The Guardian recognises the climate emergency as the defining issue of our times.

Our independence means we are free to investigate and challenge inaction by those in power. We will inform our readers about threats to the environment based on

scientific facts, not driven by commercial or political interests. And we have made several important changes to our style guide to ensure the language we use accurately reflects the environmental catastrophe.

In Australia, we commit to delivering the most comprehensive environmental

reporting in the country. We will hold those in power to account for their inadequate national response and keep our focus on the actions of the Morrison government.

Guardian Australia will continue to pursue deep investigations into the most important environmental issues.

The Guardian believes that the problems we face on the climate crisis are systemic and that fundamental societal change is needed. We will keep reporting on the efforts of individuals and communities around the world who are fearlessly taking a stand for future generations and the preservation of human life on earth. We want their stories to inspire hope. We will also report back on our own progress as an

organisation, as we take important steps to address our impact on the environment.

The Guardian made a choice: to keep our journalism open to all. We do not have a paywall because we believe everyone deserves access to factual information, regardless of where they live or what they can afford.

We hope you will consider supporting the Guardian’s open, independent reporting today. Every contribution from our readers, however big or small, is so valuable.

Support The Guardian from as little as $1 – and it only takes a minute. Thank you.

(5)

Support The Guardian

Topics

• Royal commission into aged care quality and safety

• Aged care

• Melbourne

• features

References

Related documents

This study was guided by several fundamental questions which helped to focus our study to best understand expert perceptions of applying VERP in U.S. 1) What are the

After 18 ... Instead 21 Rh4!? might be stronger, when the stakes quickly become quite high after 21 ... Rd5 22 Nf4 Rf5 and it feels like anything could happen.. Black is

Let us therefore come boldly to the throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy and find grace to help in time of need (Hebrews 4:16)?. As has been mentioned, because of Jesus,

Planning for the 1999 Iowa Oral Health Survey began in the spring of 1999 and included personnel from the Dental Health Bureau of the Iowa Department of Public Health,

Parkinson’s patients with impaired cognition generally do not do well with DBS, partly because the procedure is complicated and the patient must be able to reliable and

The Professor gave Phillip a grin and said, "It took me many years, but I discovered teaching to be the thing that gave meaning to my existence ​.. ​The greatest gift

Effect of flood depth on creeping rivergrass whole plant fresh weight, total stem length, growth rate, node production and production of nodes with adventitious roots at

Institution users with the Financial Administration role can view payments submitted by any user of their institution.. Individual and institution users without the