Otago Daily Times

West Coast leaders call for dementia care funding changes

- LAURA MILLS

GREYMOUTH: Politician­s and local leaders are demanding changes in the health system so West Coasters with dementia do not have to move to Christchur­ch for resthome care.

West CoastTasma­n MP Damien O’Connor has written to the West Coast District Health Board about the severe shortage of dementia beds, and also wants progress on changing the funding system.

Heritage Lifecare Ltd confirmed recently it has abandoned plans to convert the former Kowhai Manor resthome on the Greymouth hillside into a specialise­d dementia unit.

That means dementia patients who cannot get into O’Conor Home in Westport, or the Kahurangi unit at Greymouth Hospital, have to leave the West Coast for care. Currently there are only 35 dementia beds between both homes, and both have long waiting lists.

Dementia care is specialise­d and elderly residents diagnosed with the illness cannot be kept in a regular resthome.

Mr O’Connor said he had written to the DHB asking how it was going to cover ‘‘this area of need’’.

‘‘Clearly, at some stage in their planning or lack of, they have underestim­ated the demand for this level of care. That has to be addressed.’’

The O’Conor Home trust had raised with him the ‘‘anomaly’’ whereby resthome funding is based on land values and he hoped to see progress on that funding formula, Mr O’Connor said.

Buller Mayor Garry Howard, who has been championin­g a review of aged care in the region, said the reality was it was just not economic to open a new dementia facility on the West Coast because of the land valuebased funding model.

Mr Howard said a facility the size of O’Conor Home, of which he is a trustee, would receive $253,000 more funding each year if it had been built in Auckland, because the funding model was based on land values. If in Christchur­ch, it would get $69,000 more.

However, the resthomes had to pay the same rates for labour and overheads, no matter where they were, he said.

‘‘It’s illogical.’’

Mr Howard said Buller leaders were ‘‘quite conscious’’ that families were anxious about where their parents and partners may have to go for dementia level care.

National Party list MP Maureen Pugh said there were inequities for rural providers with the current model and she fully supported the funding review under way.

‘‘We will not attract new providers for dementia care facilities unless the funding model supports them.

‘‘There are other cost pressures that our rest homes are experienci­ng following the increase in minimum wages, which has in turn pushed up wages for other tiers within an organisati­on,’’ Mrs Pugh said.

‘‘Of huge concern to me is the potential for all health services that rely on population­based funding, to lose income following the disastrous census. I am keeping a close watch on this to ensure we are not financiall­y disadvanta­ged.’’

West Coast DHB executive director planning, funding and decision support Carolyn Gullery said the board had held discussion­s with one private provider, Heritage Lifecare, last year and provided a letter of offer to ‘‘capacity fund’’ some beds.

‘‘However, a more detailed feasibilit­y study by the provider demonstrat­ed a number of issues with the viability of their proposal, and the DHB’s offer was not formally accepted, and has since been withdrawn.’’

Ms Gullery said the DHB was ‘‘very aware that there is lack of choice for people requiring dementia resthome and psychogeri­atric levels of care’’ in facilities close to where they and their family lived.

Dixon House extended into hospital level care last year and was allocated up to 20 patients requiring hospital care.

Grey District Mayor Tony Kokshoorn, who is on the Dixon House board, said dementia care required a new level of care, and capital.

‘‘I’m not saying we won’t go there one day. Resthomes will go into that in the future.’’ — Greymouth Star

 ??  ?? Damien O’Connor
Damien O’Connor

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