Showing posts with label Elderly Care. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Elderly Care. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Elderly Can Sue If They Are Discriminated

 
Elderly denied NHS care 'can sue'
Elderly patient in hospital Wellbeing and dignity must be upheld
Age discrimination by NHS hospitals is to be outlawed, ministers have announced. From October, elderly patients will have the right to sue if they have been denied care based on age alone, says Care Minister Paul Burstow.

This will not mean patients can demand any treatment they want. Care decisions will still be judged according to clinical need by doctors.
But NHS staff will have a legal duty to consider wellbeing and dignity.
The decision, which applies to hospitals in England, Wales and Scotland, follows a consultation exercise on the issue by the Home Office. The charity Age UK said it was long overdue but good news.
Equal rights
Age discrimination in the workplace is already unlawful, but until now there was no equivalent legal requirement on public and private services.

This has led to inconsistent practices and unfair treatment, with the needs of older people in particular being ignored, the government says.
Too old? When Kenneth Worden, from Chester, was diagnosed with an aggressive form of bladder cancer he was told by doctors that he was too old at the age of 78 to have surgery.
But his daughter Michele Halligan, who is trained as a midwife, disagreed. She was determined that her father should have the treatment in a bid to ease his distressing symptoms - he was in a great deal of pain and had disturbed sleep because of he had to use the toilet every half hour.
After more consultations Kenneth was eventually treated by surgeons at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham.

Three years on from his surgery he is fit and well with no signs of the cancer returning.
An investigation by The King's Fund recently found treatable conditions such as incontinence and depression were sometimes ignored in older patients.

Last year the Health Service Ombudsman accused the NHS of failing to meet "even the most basic standards of care" for the over-65s in England.
Mr Burstow said: "I have heard numerous stories from people who feel that they have been discriminated against.

"One 84-year-old lady told how her doctor had been treating her for angina for years.
"Two years ago, she had an appointment to have an operation on a bunion on her big toe. However, because of the angina, they sent her for a heart scan.

"They found that it was not angina, but actually a leaky valve. She asked if she could have this fixed and the doctors said: 'What are you bothered about, at your age?'

"I am pleased to say she stuck to her guns and said she wanted the job done. At long last, she has managed to get an appointment but the whole experience made her feel pushed aside.

"This is exactly the kind of discrimination we want to rule out in the NHS."
There is an onus to consider the wellbeing and dignity of older people

There will be specific exceptions from the new law, for example insurance companies will still be able to use age when assessing risk and deciding prices.

Michelle Mitchell, charity director general of Age UK, said: "We hope the new law which will apply to the NHS, social care and other services will prevent older people being denied proper treatment because of their age.

"It sends a clear message to service providers that discrimination law will in future also protect older people."

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PET+BLOGSPOT is the ONLINE BLOG of the Malaysian Animal-Assisted Therapy for the Disabled and Elderly Association or Petpositive. Our stories are CURRENT, ACCURATE and RELIABLE. We offer both local and foreign news on animals, disability and the elderly. PET+BLOGSPOT was first established in October 2007. Our hits since then are now 150,000 and ever increasing! PET+BLOGSPOT is updated daily. Kindly note that views expressed in PET+BLOGSPOT are not necessarily those of PETPOSITIVE. You may also visit our Webpage by browsing: www.petpositive.com.my You can also find us in Facebook under PETPOSITIVE EMPOWERMENT. Please sign up as a FOLLOWER of this Blog if you haven't done so already in order to show us your kind support for our work. Thank you!

Saturday, April 07, 2012

Missing - Dignity For The Elderly

PETPOSITIVE WEEKEND VIEW: 

Missing — dignity for the elderly

Thursday, April 05, 2012 - 12:22
BeingFrankApril4
THE viewing public sobs over corny television commercials that are aimed at touching the heart with love and honesty. Then, thousands blub when their favourite star has been voted off a reality show.
But when it comes to real pain, no one seems to care. Few shed any tears over the unkind way the elderly are treated.

The force of this failure on hapless elders hardly bears thinking about: the real tears flow; frustrated and depressed, they feel they have been stripped of self-worth and dignity; some are so downhearted they want to die.

Have we become a society that treats elderly parents and grandparents with such neglect and downright ingratitude?

When you encounter instances of family discard, it is deeply dreadful. This Easter Sunday, Michael, 70 and almost blind, will be put to bed for the night at 5pm to fit in with the time slot of his home help’s visit.

He lives alone and his five children and 12 grandchildren are not expected to visit him. They hardly do. Last Christmas, I came across Michael by chance: a neighbour of his who knows I am a journalist got in touch.

Then, two weeks ago, the latest in a reprehensible catalogue of heartlessness emerged in The Malay Mail’s Hotline involving a 72-year-old widow, Gracie Michael Christian who has not left her fourth floor apartment in Bandar Baru Sentul for three years. Again, a neighbour felt for her.

Despite having three adult children, who are all employed, and one living just two floors above her unit, none seem to have time to look after her — or even pay her a visit regularly.

Hotline alerted the Federal Territory Social Welfare Department to her predicament, but it could only offer counselling sessions to deal with Gracie’s “loneliness issues” because welfare officers found that her children could support her financially.

Clearly, the welfare department is out of sync with care for the elderly by merely offering counselling. It should refrain from considering Gracie and other old people in a similar predicament as a burden — a growing mass of demanding parasites.

Like Singapore, there must be laws enacted to punish children who abandon their parents when they are old or disabled. Abandonment however does not mean putting them in homes. They should be put in homes that can best cater to their physical and medical needs.

Sure, this is not always possible in a regular family environment, owing to the many commitments of the bread winner.

However, visiting them regularly in the homes should also be made mandatory by law.

The government should also issue special express passes for foreign caregivers to ensure quality care for the elderly who need special attention.

It should also subsidise the cost of hiring them and eventually pay it in full. Disabled people in the US for example, can get caregivers in the day time and night time charged to the government.

Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak recently weighed down on this issue, saying the nation had a new challenge in the care for elders when launching the Caring for Old Folks Awareness Campaign in Seremban.

Najib said there were 2.1 million (7.3 per cent) senior citizens in the country last year, and that the figure was expected to rise to 3.2 million (9.5 per cent) in 2020 to about 15 per cent in 2030.

He stated: “This is a new challenge for us. As the level of health improves, so does our lifespan.

“With this increasing lifespan, we can expect those who live above the age of 60 to increase each year.

“However, the burden of caring for these old folk should not rest entirely on the government. There must also be responsibility on the part of children towards their parents.”

Najib said he could not bear to see the number of old folk being left in homes and called on children to be more compassionate and loving towards their aged parents. He said although the government might be able care for these old folk, it could not give them the love and attention they needed, the way their own children could.

“They have sacrificed their whole lives to look after us and it is our duty to love them and care for them till their final day,” he added.

You can’t dispute the reality that the elderly are utterly cast as an economic drag on the young and the nation. Medical advances and population trends mean there are more and more old people having to be supported by younger generations.

The result is that society no longer acknowledges how much it owes to previous generations, and children no longer feel an obligation to look after their parents in old age.

We may claim that we are rushed off our feet, that our commitments at work don’t allow us the time to care for our elders.

But it is simply not good enough to absolve ourselves of responsibility and contract out the care we owe the generations that preceded us. Nobody pretends that looking after the elderly is anything but demanding.

I really don’t know how we can call ourselves a civilised nation when we so badly fail those who made this country and gave us a future.

The neglect of elderly relatives is a great cruelty of our age. In our heart of hearts, we all know that most of the old and infirm would be happier in the care of their own families.

The government would do well to champion the interests of older people through a Dignity for the Elderly campaign. Clearly, parents expect to be with their families until the end but aging dogs in kennels seem to have more of a life than many of them.

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There was one moment last week that summed up how everything that could go wrong was going wrong for the MIC. On Wednesday, party president Datuk Seri Palanivel told newsmen at a press conference that MIC candidates for the coming general election must have “good looks” besides having the necessary leadership qualities.

When pressed to explain the good-looks criteria, he said: “Being handsome will be a plus point when he goes down to the ground to meet voters as they will want to approach him.”

If Palanivel is saying good looks can help attract people and would translate into more votes for the party, he has more or less just declared that the entire party would be wiped out at the polls.

The greatest danger for any leader is being laughed at — mockery is the hardest thing to recover from in politics.

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The death of an African student at the hands of a mob of Rela men has shone a light on this breed of law enforcers that detractors accurately predicted would lead to the kind of confrontations that took the life of the Nigerian over the weekend.

Onochie Martins Nwanko, 38, was beaten to death by seven People’s Volunteer Corps (Rela) personnel on suspicion of having molested a cleaner at the Kajang condominium he was living in — putting even greater pressure on the authorities to review the involvement of such men in the controversial policing scheme where non-cops wear police uniforms during joint patrols.

Imagine if any of these Rela men involved in the death of the African were to don police uniform and patrol the streets under the much-criticised police community scheme involving support agencies involved in enforcing law and order.

Initial police investigation raises grave doubts as to whether the attack on Nwanko was justified.

It has to be determined quickly if the threat to the lives of the Rela men was imminent and extreme — if only to douse the anger among the migrant population here.

Media reports stated the condominium residents were unhappy that the management had placed Rela staff there to look after security.

The Africans living there have claimed the Rela personnel had constantly harassed them. Hate crime?


Multiple award-winning journalist Frankie D’Cruz is Editor-At-Large of The Malay Mail. He can be reached at frankie@mmail.com.my

PET+BLOGSPOT is the ONLINE BLOG of the Malaysian Animal-Assisted Therapy for the Disabled and Elderly Association or Petpositive. Our stories are CURRENT, ACCURATE and RELIABLE. We offer both local and foreign news on animals, disability and the elderly. PET+BLOGSPOT was first established in October 2007. Our hits since then are now 150,000 and ever increasing! PET+BLOGSPOT is updated daily. Kindly note that views expressed in PET+BLOGSPOT are not necessarily those of PETPOSITIVE. You may also visit our Webpage by browsing: www.petpositive.com.my You can also find us in Facebook under PETPOSITIVE EMPOWERMENT. Please sign up as a FOLLOWER of this Blog if you haven't done so already in order to show us your kind support for our work. Thank you!