Campaigning
for the rights of older people
**NEWS
– Immediate Release**
NPC calls for
urgent inquiry into care homes told to have ‘Do Not Resuscitate’
policy during pandemic
The National Pensioners’
Convention is calling for an urgent inquiry after a new report
revealed some care home staff were told to put blanket Do Not
Resuscitate (DNR) orders on residents at the height of the pandemic.
The NPC, the UK’s largest
campaigning group for older people is shocked by the findings of a
survey published today
(24 August 2020)* by the Queen’s Nursing Institute (QNI)
on the effect of the Covid-19 pandemic on the UK’s nursing and
residential homes.
NPC General Secretary Jan Shortt
will be writing to the report’s author, Professor Alison Leary,
MBE, Director of the ICNO and Professor of Healthcare and Workforce
Modelling at London South Bank University, and QNI Chief Executive Dr
Crystal Oldman, CBE, to support their call for an urgent inquiry.
The NPC will also be contacting
Health Secretary Matt Hancock to ask that he launch an immediate
investigation into the findings.
Jan Shortt said: “The
findings of this survey prove what the NPC has long suspected –
that our oldest and most vulnerable were merely seen as collateral
damage rather than as human beings by senior NHS executives at the
height of the pandemic.
“Care home staff were already
under tremendous pressure to save the lives of their residents. To
then try and force them to put blanket DNR orders on patients is
appalling. There must be an inquiry into what happened in our care
homes and NHS Trusts before the onset of winter, when there is a real
risk that a rise in Covid-19 cases puts even
more lives at risk.”
NPC Vice President Peter
Rayner, 86, added, “It is shocking at my age to realise that only
luck stands between me and having a DNR sign hung over my bed! It
shows that any person my age is at risk of institutionalised
destruction of our Human Rights in a numbers game being played by
trust executives and managers.”
*The report by the Queen’s
Nursing Institute states
that one in 10 care home staff surveyed were told to change DNR plans
without discussion with families, nursing staff or residents
themselves. A fifth reported receiving residents from hospital who
had tested positive for Covid-19, even though they did not always
have appropriate Personal Protective Equipment to care for them.
Staff also warned that some hospitals were operating a “no
admissions” policy for care home residents – even for non-covid
conditions such as heart attacks – and some said they had struggled
to make appointments with GP’s for elderly people.
www.qni.org.uk/news-and-events/news/major-new-survey-of-care-home-leaders-confirms-severe-impact-of-covid-19/
ENDS
*The National
Pensioners Convention
was
set up in 1979 to champion the rights and welfare of the UK’s older
people. It now represents more than 1.5 million people in over 1,000
different organisations across the UK and holds an Annual Convention
– a pensioners’ parliament - to debate issues affecting older
people.
www.npcuk.org
For
more information, contact:
Beverley
Morrison
Campaign
& Media Officer
Bottom
of Form
National
Pensioners Convention
Telephone:
07588 779515
bevmorrison@npcuk.org
or info@npcuk.org