The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Care group claims inspection­s are ‘not treated equally’

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A care group has questioned the fairness of a watchdog’s inspection­s approach during the coronaviru­s pandemic after it emerged local authority homes are far less likely to be inspected than private ones.

Renaissanc­e Care said analysis of a Freedom of Informatio­n response it received from the Care Inspectora­te found council-run homes, which account for around 15% of all care homes in Scotland, had received under 5% of visits since March 23.

The private firm said the response showed there have been 299 inspection­s carried out by the watchdog since that date, with 260 (87%) of those in independen­t homes and 25 (8.4%) in voluntar y or not- forprofit homes.

Just 14 (4.7%) were in homes run by local authoritie­s, Renaissanc­e Care said.

Renaissanc­e Care said if the sectors were treated equally, the number of inspection­s at local authority homes should be more than three times higher.

If 15% of the 299 visits had been to local authority homes there would have been 45 visits to such facilities.

Robert Kilgour, who runs Renaissanc­e Care, submitted the FOI request and said the results show care homes are not being treated equally.

He said: “Covid makes no distinctio­n between independen­t, voluntary or local authority homes but it appears unarguable from these official statistics that the Care Inspectora­te regime does.

“Many operators in the independen­t and voluntary sector have been harbouring growing suspicions that we are being subjected to a far higher frequency of inspection­s than our counterpar­ts in the local authority sec tor and these statistics certainly confirm that view.

“If the disparity had been a small one, no one would be asking questions, but these figures show very starkly that local authority care home inspection­s are running at just a third of the level you would reasonably expect, given they account for 15% of the sector in Scotland.

“It’s such a glaring difference that it raises serious and fundamenta­l questions about the inspection approach being taken.”

Mr Kilgour, from Fife, said it is “vital” there is consistenc­y.

He said: “It is essential, if we are to protect residents and staff as much as humanly possible, that all care homes are subjected to full and proper scrutiny, but that approach must be consistent, regardless of who is operating them.

A Care Inspectora­te spokesman said: “During the pandemic, the Care Inspectora­te has focused inspection activity on services that need the most support.

“Where we have identified areas of concern we have reported on these and where we have needed to take further action to support improvemen­t we have not hesitated to do so.”

The Scottish Government has been asked for comment.

 ??  ?? Renaissanc­e Care chairman Robert Kilgour.
Renaissanc­e Care chairman Robert Kilgour.

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