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'State of Care' report

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  • 'State of Care' report

    Pressures on health and care services are increasing the risks of poor care according to our latest report

    23 November 2012

    We’ve brought together the findings from over 13,000 inspections to bring you a comprehensive report on the shape of health and social care in England.
    The report highlights that issues around staffing and ensuring they have the right skills to care for people with complex conditions are beginning to affect the quality of care that services deliver. This is especially having an impact on respecting people who use services and nutrition.
    The increase in people requiring care for age-related conditions or multiple conditions, has meant that there has been a growth in demand for nursing home services. In 2011/12, we saw a 1.4 per cent increase in the number of nursing home services that registered with us.
    The report notes many examples of organisations that meet these challenges and deliver an excellent quality of care, but our inspectors have seen examples of services that have not been able to cope with these changes. Many displayed common factors including an attitude to care that is based on getting tasks done and where unacceptable care has become the norm.
    Our key findings show:
    • one in 10 NHS hospitals failed to treat people with the respect they deserve and failed to involve them in decisions about their care.
    • 15 per cent of social care services were not providing care that respected people.
    • 23 per cent did not have adequate staffing levels.

    David Behan, CQC Chief Executive, says, “Health and care services need to rise to the challenge of responding to the increasingly complex conditions suffered by our ageing population. That means delivering care that is based on the person’s needs, not care that suits the way organisations work. It also means that different services need to work well together in an integrated way that meets the best interests of the people who use these services.
    “CQC will use its increasing knowledge and understanding, gained through thousands of inspections of services, to spot growing trends that are directly leading to poor care. Where we find standards are not being met we require improvements and we will use our enforcement powers where necessary to tackle issues such as staff shortages or the failure of service providers to involve people in decisions about their own care.”



    http://www.cqc.org.uk/public/news/pr...g-our-latest-r
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  • #2
    Re: 'State of Care' report

    Pretty much everything I've seen in the media for the last 2-3 years demonstrates the existence of a huge problem here.

    The question is: How is it going to even be addressed? How can you 'teach' a hospital to treat people with dignity?? Shouldn't that happen with ease? Sadly not.
    "Although scalar fields are Lorentz scalars, they may transform nontrivially under other symmetries, such as flavour or isospin. For example, the pion is invariant under the restricted Lorentz group, but is an isospin triplet (meaning it transforms like a three component vector under the SU(2) isospin symmetry). Furthermore, it picks up a negative phase under parity inversion, so it transforms nontrivially under the full Lorentz group; such particles are called pseudoscalar rather than scalar. Most mesons are pseudoscalar particles." (finally explained to a captivated Celestine by Professor Brian Cox on Wednesday 27th June 2012 )

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    • #3
      Re: 'State of Care' report

      Says it all really, this country is more interested in funding people to bring children into this world and cannot be bothered with the older, more deserving people who have paid in al their lives and should be entitled to care with dignity until the end of their days.

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      • #4
        Re: 'State of Care' report

        The problem with social care/care in the community/private care homes is that they are now run by big business, multi nationals who care for profit for the share holders and bonus payments etc, and not the patients. i will not use the word customers either

        Most staff in these care centres are on low pay and minimum wage. That is why the care homes cannot employ enough staff and rely heavily on overseas staff.

        Even staff in hospitals are now recruited from agencies. This level of care has degraded ever since it was taken out of local authority provision and handed to the private sector.

        I am sorry to say

        pay peanuts, get monkeys

        it is a shame as most staff are dedicated in the caring profession but simple economics mean they cant follow thier chosen path

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