New Year 2016: with mum
thankfully recovering from an emergency admission from her care home to
hospital just before Christmas (and another acute episode at the beginning of
January), I made a formal complaint to the General Manager about a number of
issues that had led up to this crisis. I
was shocked to find myself in this situation, as prior to summer 2015 I had had
nothing but praise for the home.
I did not blame the staff,
who were clearly doing their best as before, but with ever-greater demands on
their time since a new wing had opened in mum’s unit, doubling capacity. As the complaints process progressed through
the subsequent months and indeed years, it also became evident that most of the problems
could not be solved unilaterally by the manager, but had their roots in
corporate culture and finance.
The company, which still
trades on the person-centred ethos of its founder, had changed its structure
and aims: it was now run by a corporate board with City objectives. These
structural and strategic changes occurred back in 2013, but were never
communicated to the residents and families dependent on its extensive network
of homes. It took a couple of years for
their effect to filter down.
In the last decade, a
number of new operators have entered the market – many from a background of
“hospitality”, rather than nursing or social-care. In short, hotels. They have looked at the demographics and seen
that there is a burgeoning demand for retirement apartments and care homes, but
may not appreciate the difference between them.
We know about accommodation,
they think; we can do that. And if we
make it glossy and build in richer parts of the country, we can charge premium
rates.
And yes, active and
affluent retirees in their sixties and seventies may well enjoy a cinema,
swimming pool, café bar, and the kind of cool minimalist décor they have grown
used to at home or in upmarket hotels and restaurants. These are lovely facilities, if money is no
object and you are fit and well. Even
so, I would argue that the qualities you seek for a short break in a luxury
hotel or time-share complex are not the same as your own home comforts.
And if you are over
eighty, frail, confused, living with dementia or other degenerative disease,
and looking for a home with intensive
practical support, they are not the
most important factors. What you need is
people. This cannot be said enough. People can give care. Fancy
curtains can’t hold your hand when you’re dying.
The much-vaunted
“person-centred care”, touted on every website and brochure, needs two
essential ingredients: staff and time.
Enough well-trained, well-paid, kind, empathetic staff; and enough time
for those staff to spend with their residents outside practical care tasks, to
engage with them as people, not room numbers.
So it frustrates and
depresses me to see care home companies all hurtling sheep-like down the road
of spa hotel one-upmanship, at the expense of investment in the basics. And it breaks my heart that mum’s provider,
that once led the field in genuine person-centred care, now feels the need to
compete on these terms – offering a staff/resident ratio just a little bit
better than its competitors (but significantly worse than its own prior to 2015),
and achieving that “little bit better” by making stealthy cuts to service
elsewhere (catering, housekeeping, maintenance) and by keeping staff on minimum
wage.
It’s well-known that the
National Living Wage has placed greater financial strain on both care providers and funding bodies. Good care isn’t
cheap, it never will be, and should not depend on the exploitation of
workers. But if there is a crisis in funding and priorities have to be chosen, that’s a conversation providers
should be having with residents and
families, not a unilateral decision to be deployed by sleight of hand to
maintain profit.
In my view, there’s a
moral imperative for transparency; but if commercial arguments are all that
count, I would point out that at the time of mum’s crisis in December 2015, we
had personally paid over £200,000 to that company. That represents the sale of our family home,
our collective lifetime assets. Surely
that buys us some rights of consultation?
(The annual residents and
families survey had quietly been dropped around the time of the corporate
changes, and communications from the company were minimal; the one meeting with
the new manager was held on a weekday afternoon when most relatives could not
attend.)
While there was apparently
scant budget for daily running costs, money was available in relative abundance
for cosmetic improvements and gimmicks. Focusing on kerb appeal to attract new
business in this way, to the detriment of basic daily care and humanity, is a
pernicious economy. I suspect a cynical calculation
that, as the average stay in care is two-and-a-half years, some providers concentrate on
point of sale, rather than providing an ongoing standard of service, because their “customers” have a natural shelf life and won’t be around to complain.
Please prove me wrong.
So what happened to my
complaint? (For details, see previous
posts, Problems, and Crisis.) After many months of extensive correspondence,
meetings, and stress that escalated the case to Divisional Manager level (three
stages up; a saga in itself), at one point it appeared to be resolved to relative
satisfaction, but after another change of senior management, the main issues persisted*. Early on, I had accepted
that the hospital admission was necessary in the circumstances, and that night
staff, faced with a life-threatening emergency, acted in good faith, to the
best of their ability. I had no complaint against them.
My main concern was to
address the issue of staffing levels on mum’s unit (which had fallen 40%
between July and December 2015, from 1:3 to 1:5/6), a general fall in service provision throughout the home, and the circumstances that led to mum’s sudden deterioration in the latter half of 2015.
With improved monitoring
in 2016, she rallied from this crisis, and by summer had improved enough to be
able to sit out in the garden on some days. By that summer of 2016, there was a staff/resident ratio of 1:4/5 in daytime – although at times this slipped back down to 1:6 - but there were no plans to
restore the original ratio of 1:3 or the proportion of nursing cover within
that, which remained half that of pre-2015.
(Staffing ratios overall need to be higher in dementia nursing units than in purely residential care, because
residents’ physical dependency becomes intense, with help needed for eating, drinking, continence, and two care-workers required to lift a person and sometimes to
manage distressed behaviour.)
The squash dispenser was restored (but with cheap and very diluted squash, not fresh juice); whiteboards in both lounges and some of the
dementia-friendly design features were reinstated, but application of these was patchy. The atmosphere on the new wing became more homely; but although decorations on the
old wing were finally completed, that lounge remained less used and less
welcoming in character.
The residents and families survey resumed in October 2016, with a new staff survey supposedly to follow. One of the nursing stations was allocated a computer and a unit email address, but the latter still did not allow care staff and families to communicate directly, only via the deputy manager or receptionist as before – the company reneged on a short-lived commitment to provide direct access.
The residents and families survey resumed in October 2016, with a new staff survey supposedly to follow. One of the nursing stations was allocated a computer and a unit email address, but the latter still did not allow care staff and families to communicate directly, only via the deputy manager or receptionist as before – the company reneged on a short-lived commitment to provide direct access.
(I canvassed other major care providers for their policy on emergency admissions to hospital; shockingly none was willing to guarantee that residents would always be escorted - because that requires a degree of slack in their staffing levels above bare minimum cover, the standard for their budgets. Ask yourself, would it be acceptable for a terminally ill child to be sent alone to ED? No? Then why do providers - charging up to £2,000 per week - believe it to be so for a frail elderly person with severe cognitive impairment or for an adult with learning disability? You won't find that in any glossy sales brochure.)
One key question remains
unanswered: were the actions of mum’s care provider (in downgrading its service) motivated by need or greed? Did
they make cuts simply to survive, or rather to maximise profit? The latter being negotiable, the former, not.
The spectre looming over all of this is that of care companies, such as Southern Cross, suddenly going bust.
The regulator, the Care Quality Commission, now has a scheme called
Market Oversight that monitors the financial viability of key providers and
aims to warn local authorities if services they purchase are vulnerable to
collapse. As far as I know, there is no
equivalent protection for self-funders, who remain entirely reliant on providers
themselves (and their own independent research) for information.
The financial background
of providers is notoriously labyrinthine and hard to interpret for the layman.
I would like to see residents and families entitled to receive the same annual
reports as shareholders – we are indeed the principal stakeholders in that
business.
Throughout the UK, there
is a known shortage of nurses in general, let alone specialist dementia
nurses (and Brexit threatens to exacerbate this situation). The appointment and retention of
suitably qualified staff is undoubtedly a challenge for providers in a competitive
market, and the Divisional Manager of mum’s company argued that they offer structured training, promotion, and bonuses to provide opportunities for career
progression; but while these may look attractive on paper, from my observations I would suggest that staff retention is less
about long-term corporate incentives (that take staff away from hands-on care) than decent daily working conditions:
Listen to the staff, value
their opinions and expertise, and act on it; give them proper meal breaks and meals; pay them a good basic rate for very hard work (13-hour shifts in some
cases); subsidise child-care or at least try to accommodate staff with fixed rosters; treat them with as much kindness and respect as is due to residents
and families.
Above all, value the bond
between residents and care-workers who know them well; see it as an asset, not a threat. (Don’t, for instance, deliberately roster staff
away from their accustomed units to render them interchangeable for corporate
efficiencies; “personal” care should be just that.)
Finally, whatever the
financial challenges, never forget that residents are not inanimate “units of business”, but people - whose lives depend on you. If a genuine desire to provide care is not
your prime motivation, look elsewhere to make your profits. A home is not a hotel. This is what it's about:
*Updated @November 2016, August 2017, May 2018, April 2019, April 2020 (see postscript below).
NB: During 2017 and 2018, this situation escalated further to crisis for the home as a whole (not just my complaint), with it being rated "Requires Improvement" in all categories by the CQC in 2018, where it had formerly been "Good" or above. In May 2018, regretfully I felt I had to move mum out of this once excellent home; it was a huge decision, but thankfully she settled well into her new home in the same area, due in no small part to some familiar staff who had preceded her there. Continuity of care is paramount for those with dementia and I was grateful that she had that once more. However, I am also aware of our good fortune as self-funders in being able to make this move; others were not so lucky, and many of the issues described here persisted in the original home for some time after she left.
Update: as per summer 2019, I was pleased to find that the original home had received a good rating once more, but in her state of advanced age and frailty I didn't feel mum had time in 2018 to wait for this improvement. Crucially, I now know no provider is immune from them; they are part of the overall landscape of the sector, due to funding models that remain contentious.
Update: In January 2020, my mum died. I'm thankful it was peaceful, before the COVID19 outbreak, and I was able to spend the whole time with her in the weeks preceding her eventual demise, holding her hand until the last; eternally grateful for the wonderful care she received in her final home and to kind and dedicated staff in both homes who supported us throughout her more than eight years in care.
Sadly, I hear that the original home, having received a good CQC report in 2019, "promoted" the new manager to an executive post overseeing a group of regional homes (a familiar pattern), leaving that home once more under temporary leadership - and once more spending lavish sums on cosmetic refurbishments, when extensive redecorations had been completed barely a year earlier, at a time when staffing across the whole sector continues to be the top operational issue. Desperately disappointing, the more so when care homes are suffering so much from government funding neglect in the face of COVID19.
Meanwhile, a report into privatised adult social care by Professor Bob Hudson indicates that the detrimental changes I have witnessed in mum's home are common symptoms of the drive among providers to maximise profit by cutting down on their major expense and main budget variable: staff. (See in particular points 12 & 13 on page 9 of the report...)
[NB: This post was written in 2016, pre-COVID-19. Coronavirus has placed further strains on the care sector, and restrictions on visiting care homes may now apply; please check with the provider.]