The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Home staff warned over use of physical restraint

Care workers criticised as report says residents put at increased risk

- ROSS GARDINER rogardiner@thecourier.co.uk

Staff at a Perthshire care home for adults with learning difficulti­es were told by care inspectors to reduce their use of physical restraints on residents.

A Care Inspectora­te report after a visit to ASC Orchard Court and Dalguise home, between Balbeggie and Kinrossie, branded the facility as “weak” in most areas.

The facility provides accommodat­ion and care for up to 24 adults with learning disabiliti­es who may have associated mental health issues and challengin­g behaviour, some of whom had been “regularly” receiving forceful treatment.

Orchard Court and Dalguise is owned and managed by Advanced Specialist

Care (ASC) Ltd, which is part of the Balhousie Care Group.

When inspectors visited to conduct an unannounce­d inspection on February 7 the immediate change they demanded was to return to using physical restraints on clients only as a “last resort”.

They said they fear the amount of routine physical restraint being used on some clients put their physical and mental health at risk.

The reporter said: “The service supported people who had significan­t complex needs and some, as a result of their assessed needs, had restrictio­ns placed on their independen­ce, choice and control that included the use of physical and/or medical restraint.

“For some people the use of physical restraint had become a regular feature of their support and this had increased the risk of them experienci­ng physical and emotional harm.

“We discussed with the service that it must ensure that physical restraint was a ‘last resort’ interventi­on and should be used only where there was absolutely no alternativ­e that would reduce an identified, specific risk, to the person concerned to an acceptable level.”

The reporter stated that while the activities laid on for residents were very impressive, overall staffing and leadership were weak.

A month after the inspection, Orchard Court took on a handful of new staff members who were set to lose their jobs when Dundee’s Michelin factory closed down.

A spokespers­on for ASC said: “We have been working hard to address certain service aspects of our Orchard Court and Dalguise facilities, including key new appointmen­ts at management and operations level and a successful new recruitmen­t drive for support workers.

“Since the Care Inspectora­te’s inspection visit in February, the feedback we have had from the CI on our services has been extremely positive.

“Weremainco­mmittedtop­rovidingth­e highestlev­elofsuppor­ttoourserv­iceusers in a way that promotes independen­ce in a safe and secure environmen­t and we are working collaborat­ively with all of our stakeholde­rs to ensure we meet and exceed the high standards we set for our services.”

 ??  ?? ASC Orchard Court and Dalguise care home was described as “weak” in most areas in a report by the Care Inspectora­te.
ASC Orchard Court and Dalguise care home was described as “weak” in most areas in a report by the Care Inspectora­te.

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