The Jewish Chronicle

Jewish Care chief warns MPs over testing

- BY LEE HARPIN

JEWISH CARE chief executive Daniel Carmel-Brown has met MPs online to demand the rolling out of a “substantia­l, sophistica­ted and regular” coronaviru­s testing programme for all residents and staff members in homes after warning that the sector is experienci­ng a “separate pandemic”.

Speaking on Tuesday evening, Mr Carmel-Brown said he had spent that day with politician­s making it “very clear” that drastic improvemen­ts were needed in the availabili­ty of testing kits for care home providers, adding: “It is not enough just to come in and test one or two people.

“We are caring for the most vulnerable — testing has been too slow to be ramped up.

“We have to be testing every resident, every member of staff and we need to be doing it regularly. Testing for coronaviru­s is a bit like the MOT that people do on their cars.

“It tells you one thing one day but it doesn’t tell you anything about the future. Unless we are doing it regularly I’m afraid it will be meaningles­s in the long-term.

“We know, of course, we are going to have to live with this in one form or another until there is a vaccine.”

Echoing his criticism last week over the government’s failings on Covid-19 testing availabili­ty, Mr Carmel-Brown said, during an interview aired by the Jewish Lads’ and Girls’ Brigade (JLGB), that he has been giving a “factual” rather than a “political” response to the experience his organisati­on has faced during the current pandemic.

He added: “There are two pandemics in this country. There’s a pandemic in the community that spreads around us all and there’s a separate pandemic in our care homes.”

He said he was proud Jewish Care had decided to lock down their homes 10 days before the national closure began in March, after acting on the advice of people in within the NHS and other health services involved with the charity. “Proudly we were very quick to act — we are very fortunate to have people involved with real expertise”, said the Jewish Care chief.

Based on daily conversati­ons with these people, he said, “we took an early decision, which at the time was very controvers­ial, to close all our care homes. We took it to try to control the number of people coming into our care homes with the aim of trying to slow and reduce the spread of something we can’t see, we can’t smell or can’t hear.”

But in a clear criticism of the government’s failure to recognise the impact of Covid-19 on the nation’s care homes, the Jewish Care chief said he joined others in his sector who complained that the official statistics on fatalities were “not counting the actual numbers because sadly many people are dying in care organisati­ons.”

Mr Carmel-Brown added that “very sadly a number of our residents have died from the virus” which was a tragedy as these were people “living a very full life in our homes”.

He said the loss of life had “been really difficult for the families” who had not been with their loved ones during the last few weeks, but Jewish Care had “made it possible for them to see their loved ones at the very end of their lives”.

The Jewish Care chief exec also revealed the devastatin­g impact of coronaviru­s on his organisati­on’s 1,300-strong workforce and its other volunteers — confirming that at one stage 25 per cent of staff were having to self-isolate as a result of suffering from symptoms of the virus.

But in recognitio­n of their vital work Jewish Care has increased staff pay and overtime payments and supported them with councillor­s because of the “traumatic” nature of their jobs.

He said: “Jewish Care recognises that these people are the most important in society right now. If nothing else comes of this pandemic it will be that there is recognitio­n that organisati­ons like ours and thousands of others are valued much more than they were before.”

Meanwhile Mr Carmel-Brown praised those in the community who had contribute­d towards the £4m raised on behalf of a joint appeal launched by Jewish Care, Nightingal­e Hammerson and The Fed in Manchester, in associatio­n with the National Associatio­n of Jewish Homes (NAJH), to help the charities the fight against coronaviru­s.

He praised the work of Lord Levy, who had led the fundraisin­g effort with “one or two others”. Mr Carmel-Brown said Jewish Care alone had estimated that they would need an extra £5 m “in addition to what we would normally spend” to help tackle coronaviru­s “in the first three to four months of the crisis.”

He said the extra funds had meant there were not concerns about extra PPE for staff and residents and neither was there a problem with paying wages.

He said he was proud Jewish Care locked down 10 days before the national closure

 ?? PHOTO: FACEBOOK ?? A staff member at Lady Sarah Cohen House
PHOTO: FACEBOOK A staff member at Lady Sarah Cohen House

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