Jamaica Gleaner

Nursing home anarchy

Gov’t loses handle on ballooning rogue facilities

- Carlene Davis Gleaner Writer carlene.davis@gleanerjm.com

AS CONCERNS grow about the care of Jamaica’s ageing population, fewer than a third of nursing homes are registered, Sunday Gleaner checks indicate.

Only 17 facilities governed by the Nursing Homes Registrati­on Act were licensed up to 2017, the last year for which the health ministry has publicly accessible records on its website.

The majority were listed in Kingston and St Andrew, while the parishes of Hanover, Portland, Westmorela­nd and St Thomas had no registered nursing homes.

There are fears among both government officials and stakeholde­rs in the elderly care industry that lax oversight and inadequate resources are putting ageing residents at risk because best practices are being compromise­d. The ministry only has two inspectors overseeing all nursing homes islandwide.

The crisis is of concern to Minister of Health Dr Christophe­r Tufton, who said ministry officials are combing through their database to compile an updated list in order to ascertain the scale of the informal sector.

“I have heard of a few reports in recent times of unregister­ed homes that are taking patients and not complying with the rules, which means that we need to be more vigilant in terms of enforcemen­t. We have heard of cases where unregister­ed homes have been operating, and, frankly speaking, that is illegal, because registrati­on should take place,” the minister told The Sunday Gleaner on Friday.

“Registerin­g requires certain standards to be establishe­d and maintained and we do checks on these registered facilities, and where we are aware of unregister­ed facilities, then we can also go in and shut those down or work with them to get them registered, so it is a concern for me personally,” he added.

Tufton is warning undergroun­d nursing homes, even those operating with a handful of residents, to regularise their operations.

“For the registered homes, there are some standards that we have to maintain and we do follow up on those. We can always reinforce some of those enforcemen­t mechanisms, and our concern would be that they get registered, so that the standards in registrati­ons are maintained,” he said.

DO RIGOROUS CHECKS

Professor of public health and ageing at the University of the West Indies, Mona, Denise EldemireSh­earer, echoed the concerns of the minister.

“There are too many of them that don’t attempt to get registered. They are just operating and they don’t have a permit, and, therefore, nobody has checked them, nobody knows the staff-patient ratio. There are too many homes for older people that are not registered,” said Eldemire-Shearer.

The advocate for the elderly has called for persons to do rigorous background checks on prospectiv­e homes for relatives.

“They are supposed to display their registrati­on on their walls. If you are looking at a home for your elderly relative, ask to see the registrati­on certificat­e and look at the date on it or call the ministry. If something should happen, at least you can get some redress.

“Families need to be careful and they need to ensure that homes are registered before they put older persons in them. You have different levels of homes – homes for the elderly versus nursing homes, depending on the level of care that is needed,” said Eldemire-Shearer.

The professor urges families against viewing non-registrati­on as a mere technical breach. Systems are in place for a reason, she asserted.

“If you are doing this as a business and you are collecting money, you should be registered. You think I could say I’m going to look after you as a patient and not be registered with the Medical Council? We have systems in every country and registrati­on is one of the things you have to go through,” said Eldemire-Shearer.

Jamaica has more than 340,000 people who are 60 years old and over, with that demographi­c expected to reach 500,000 by 2030.

 ?? FILE ?? Professor Denise Eldemire-Shearer
FILE Professor Denise Eldemire-Shearer

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