The nation’s half-million care home residents face becoming the ‘abandoned victims’ of the coronavirus crisis, campaigners warned last night.
The disease has already torn through dozens of care homes, leaving them looking like ‘war zones’ and cases are expected to explode in the next few days unless urgent action is taken.
Now bosses are pleading for access to coronavirus tests amid fears carers and agency workers who do shifts in several homes a week are spreading it in multiple high-risk locations.
Fifteen out of 20 residents of Oaklands Nursing Home in East Sussex this week developed coronavirus symptoms, with a member of staff in intensive care. However, just three were tested – among them Giuseppe Casciello, 95, who died on Monday. Relatives have visited Mr Casciello every day for seven years but to compound their grief they could not be at his bedside when he died
They also warned they are being forced to play ‘Russian roulette’ with residents’ lives after the Government asked them provide beds for untested patients discharged from over-run hospitals.
MPs described the treatment of care home residents as an ‘unseen national scandal of untold proportions’ and accused the Government of abandoning the elderly when they need help the most.
It raises the horrific spectre of the scenes on the Continent where hundreds of care homes have been ravaged by the disease and in some cases staff have left the helpless victims to their fate.
Care home bosses also revealed they had been told no one over 75 in will be treated in hospital if they contract the virus.
Agency and temporary workers play a vital role in the care system can often work in four or five homes a week. But it is believed none of the around 1.3million social care workers – who also provide home help – has been tested unless they have become ill or been in hospital.Peter Kyle MP, who has written to Boris Johnson to warn of the dangers, said: ‘The lack of strategy for care homes is killing people.
‘How can they say that I as an MP has to stay home, but somebody working in four or five are homes in a week is allowed to work and not allowed to be tested?
‘It’s unimaginably stupid. If the virus gets into a care home it will kill. The only strategy is to keep it out. The only way is to keep it out is to test the people who go in.’
At the Oaklands Nursing Home in his Hove constituency it took ten days to test a 94-year-old man who later died from the virus.
During the wait, 14 other residents and seven staff developed symptoms, one of whom is now in intensive care. Most of the staff were agency who also worked in other care homes – at least one of which has now confirmed cases of coronavirus.
Government guidance issued this week suggests care homes may have to accept new residents who have coronavirus. It says hospitals will not routinely test patients entering care homes, meaning managers will be unaware if returning residents are infectious but not showing symptoms.
It said: ‘Some patients may have Covid-19… all of these patients can be safely cared for in a care home if this guidance is followed.’
Andy Geach, boss of Shedfield Lodge care home in Hampshire, said he has been asked to provide beds to ease struggling hospitals, but is worried about putting his existing residents at risk.
Mr Geach added: ‘We do not want to play Russian roulette with people’s lives.’
Martin Green, chief executive of Care England, which represents providers of all sizes, warned of a catastrophic impact unless testing is ramped up.
He said ‘hundreds’ of care homes were reporting residents displaying symptoms of coronavirus.
Professor Green insisted homes could stop the virus spreading – if they received the help they needed. ‘Homes are used to controlling infections like norovirus and flu, but they can’t get residents tested to find out if they have Covid-19.’
Another care home manager said a GP has warned her that no one over 75 in her home will be treated in hospital if they contract the virus because it would be a waste of resources. Sandra Tzannes Kastritis, of the Grange Care Home in Hove, said doctors had also been handing out ‘do not resuscitate’ forms, apparently in anticipation of widespread deaths from the virus.
The coronavirus death toll in care homes will largely go unrecorded because daily figures released by Public Health England relate only to NHS hospital fatalities.
The Health Department said: ‘Testing is a crucial part of the UK’s response to the coronavirus pandemic and the Government is determined to provide all necessary support for staff doing incredibly important work in social care.’
This is like working in a war zone: Care homes are utterly unprepared for coronavirus as the elderly are being left to die without their loved ones by their side, writes PETER KYLE MP
A crisis on a scale that defies imagination is sweeping Britain’s care homes. Unseen, unreported and too often alone, our elderly are dying from the coronavirus epidemic – killed by the system that is meant to keep them safe.
And as they die, they are denied the basic comfort of seeing their loved ones for the last time.
It’s the bitter truth that it is our dedicated care workers who are the very people spreading this virus into care homes.
Meanwhile, a far greater risk is created by sending agency workers from one home to the next, unwittingly carrying the virus with them. Once Covid-19 gets into a care home, it is almost inevitable that all the residents and probably all the staff will get it
I want to say this in the starkest possible terms. The public are rightly insistent that doctors, nurses and hospital staff need urgent protection, but a catastrophe of equal proportions is going unobserved.
For while we are focused on a few hundred hospitals, there are tens of thousands of care homes across the British Isles where carers are barely coping – despite their heroic and selfless efforts.
They are utterly unprepared for this contagion. They do not have the training to deal with it, and in many cases they are lucky to have even the most basic equipment. One care home manager told me that all the protective gear she had received was a box of 250 flimsy facemasks.
But her staff continue to provide close personal care daily. They are at high risk both of contracting the virus and of spreading it. Crucially, many care workers are employed by agencies that send them to several homes in the course of a week.
At the last Prime Minister’s Questions before sittings of the Commons were suspended, the PM told me all the protective gear Britain needed would be delivered within a week. Nothing remotely like this has happened
Since the coronavirus crisis began, these institutions have closed their doors to family members. These visits are a highlight of the week for most residents, but it’s a necessary precaution.
Meanwhile, a far greater risk is created by sending agency workers from one home to the next, unwittingly carrying the virus with them. Once Covid-19 gets into a care home, it is almost inevitable that all the residents and probably all the staff will get it.
Indeed, one manager in my constituency of Hove told me that her home to 75 people was provided with just five testing kits. Four came back positive. At another with only 13 residents, seven staff are off sick with viral symptoms. One is in intensive care.
I was an aid worker in the Balkans for a decade and I’m having conversations with care staff and managers now that remind me vividly of that war zone. They are in extreme crisis, being stretched in ways they could never have anticipated.
Yet the Government seems oblivious to all this. Deaths in care homes from coronavirus are not even included in the official statistics, which are based on hospital fatalities only.
Residents are being asked to sign ‘do not resuscitate’ (DNR) forms and told attending hospital won’t be an option for most of them. Meanwhile, care homes are being told to prepare for inevitable outbreaks of fatal disease, in effect becoming hospices with no announcement and no public debate.
In his 90-minute press conference this week, Health Secretary Matt Hancock didn’t refer to care homes once.
To solve this crisis, four things need urgently to be done. First, everyone who works in a care home has to be tested for Covid-19. If they have the infection, they must not go to work.
Secondly, the agency system that sends carers into several homes each week must stop. The Government needs to work with employers to ensure staff are assigned to just one home each, which will mean urgent funding to increase staff capacity.
Thirdly, we need much more protective equipment. Staff don’t have even the basics to deal with Covid-19. This is an outright failure by the Government.
At the last Prime Minister’s Questions before sittings of the Commons were suspended, the PM told me all the protective gear Britain needed would be delivered within a week. Nothing remotely like this has happened.
Lastly, we need antibody tests for relatives whose loved ones are dying. People who have already had the virus need to be able to show they are no longer at risk of catching or transmitting the disease.
Without these tests, they are not allowed to be with beloved parents and grandparents in their last hours.
This week I was shocked to speechlessness when a lady named Gisela told me that her father Giuseppe had died in isolation, in a care home in my constituency.
For seven years, members of Giuseppe’s family had visited him every single day. That ended several weeks ago.
Giuseppe, who had his 95th birthday two days before he died, was completely alone at the end. Gisela’s heart is breaking at the thought of it. That story is happening up and down the country.
It’s barbaric and we have to act now.
Peter Kyle is the Labour MP for Hove