The Irish Mail on Sunday

HSE U-turn over funding for Covid care

Demand on homes to take in infectious patients in exchange for funds is dropped after fatal outbreaks

- By Claire Scott and Michael O’Farrell

THE HSE has dropped its demand on nursing homes to admit Covidposit­ive or suspected Covid patients if they want pandemic support funding, the Irish Mail on Sunday has learned.

Tadhg Daly, chief executive of Nursing Homes Ireland, said after consultati­on with officials, the homes were able to have this clause, and a number of others concerning indemnity, removed from the contract.

However, he described the homes’ communicat­ion with the HSE as ‘less than satisfacto­ry’.

The original contract required homes to agree to the following: ‘We the applicant nursing home confirm that we will be open and available for admission and readmissio­n of patients to longterm residentia­l services and shortterm transition­al care service, in line with any guidance issued.’

‘Communicat­ion with HSE less than satisfacto­ry’

The guidance refers to documents issued by the Health Protection Surveillan­ce Centre (HPSC) and the Health Informatio­n Quality Authority (Hiqa) on the transfer and treatment of Covid-19 patients in residentia­l care. The HSE’s operationa­l guidelines for hospital transfers – issued on March 10 – identified transfers as a risk to nursing homes.

It reads: ‘There is a concern that patient movement may result in the introducti­on of the disease from an acute hospital to a residentia­l care facility.’

Neverthele­ss, the guidelines go on to confirm that hospital patients can be deemed eligible for transfer to care homes even if they are showing symptoms and have been identified as close contacts of others who were Covid-positive.

This is in accordance with separate guidelines updated by the HPSC on April 7. These guidelines advise that symptomati­c transfers from hospitals to residentia­l settings should be accommodat­ed in single en-suite rooms and treated as if they were Covid-positive.

The HSE previously told the MoS that transfers from hospitals to homes was a routine practice.

However, a spokesman confirmed that emergency Covid-19 funding had allowed the transfer from hospital of ‘some 400 patients across the country who were awaiting the availabili­ty of a placement’. He added that any Covid-positive hospital patient must test negative twice before a transfer to a nursing home or residentia­l care setting can happen.

Mr Daly told the MoS: ‘The clause would have been in contravent­ion of a registry requiremen­t, which states you have to do a pre-admission assessment of every resident that comes into the home.

‘So to have a contract that would state that you would have to take in a patient without any oversight was – I’m sure when they went back and looked at it they saw how foolish it was.’

The contract was published and recalled twice before the final version was published last Tuesday.

Mr Daly added: ‘They announced the funding on April 4 and we welcomed it but between then and the 16th the engagement was not satisfacto­ry from our point of view in terms of the roll-out of the scheme.

‘There has been a lot of to-ing and fro-ing to make sure they understood our concerns.

‘The other issue that still hasn’t been addressed is the non-nursing home support scheme residents, if you’re not part of the Fair Deal agreement you’re not included in the scheme. That would affect between 4,000 and 5,000 people.

‘All residents should be included in the temporary financial support scheme, not just Fair Deal residents. The Minister has given us a commitment to look at it, we’re engaged with the Minister on looking for a satisfacto­ry resolution.’

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