Calls for shake-up in care for elderly

Leadership in Health Services

ISSN: 1751-1879

Article publication date: 6 February 2009

137

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Citation

(2009), "Calls for shake-up in care for elderly", Leadership in Health Services, Vol. 22 No. 1. https://doi.org/10.1108/lhs.2009.21122aab.005

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2009, Emerald Group Publishing Limited


Calls for shake-up in care for elderly

Article Type: News and views From: Leadership in Health Services, Volume 22, Issue 1

Keywords: Elderly healthcare, Healthcare strategy, Quality of life

Andy Kerr, the Scottish Labour leadership contender, has called for a network of specialist centres to be set up to meet the needs of the elderly.

Mr Kerr claimed that too much emphasis had been put on care in the community, placing carers under strain and creating long waits for respite care. The former Health Minister called for a shake-up in services for the elderly to deal with the growing numbers in need of help.

Speaking after a visit to a new respite care facility in Muirend in Glasgow, Mr Kerr said: “Successive governments in Scotland and the UK have consistently argued that care in the community was the preferred model for the delivery of elderly services. They have overseen a massive move from institutionalised care in long-term NHS facilities to a variety of other models of care delivered in the community.

“This has resulted in very long waiting lists for respite care to assist carers and those they care for. There is a need, therefore, to design and develop new models of accommodation for the elderly, infirm and disabled and to ensure that those new-build facilities provide integrated services that add to the quality of life of the individual being cared for and the wider community.”

Mr Kerr wants to see new facilities to provide care services to the elderly together with nursery provision for the very young in the same building, a system based on the French model.

In France nursing care for the elderly is often combined with day nursery provision because experts claim the presence of youngsters can provide health benefits for the elderly and enable them to pass on their experience.

Mr Kerr claimed that the Scottish Parliament has to move beyond the provision of free personal care for the elderly to ensuring that people receive individual care plans. “It is no longer enough to be investing in the personal care of our elderly. We must ensure that they get the type of care that is individually tailored to their needs in the right type of facility,” he said.

Mr Kerr also pledged to bring forward legislation to ensure that the managers or owners of nursing homes were qualified to look after the individual needs of their residents. “This will involve working with the universities and colleges of nursing to ensure the provision of appropriate courses across Scotland that will provide the necessary training for care staff and their managers in the most up-to-date care practices and procedures for those in their care,” he said.

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