The Mail on Sunday

Dementia victims turned away ( and evicted even ) by ‘cherry-picking’ care home bosses

- By Sanchez Manning and Stephen Adams

CARE homes are refusing to accept residents with advanced dementia because they are too expensive and difficult to care for, according to a leading charity.

The chief executive of the Alzheimer’s Society said its helpline was being bombarded with calls from worried families as relatives are refused care or even evicted when their condition deteriorat­es.

Some families have had to phone dozens of homes before they find one that will accept residents with advanced dementia.

Care-home managers are said to be ‘cherry-picking’ individual­s who do not have dementia because they are easier – and cheaper – to care for. The problem has got markedly worse over the past two years, according to the charity’s chief executive Jeremy Hughes, because hundreds of homes have closed.

Mr Hughes said: ‘Families phone us up and say, “What do we do? We’ve been told that our mum, dad or sister needs to move into a care home. But we can’t find a care home to take them.”

‘Barely a day goes by when our helpline doesn’t get a call from someone saying, “What can I do?” Increasing­ly, we’re hearing of care homes having to “cherry-pick” people who are easier to support because they don’t get enough money from local authoritie­s to cover the cost of specialist dementia care. We have cases of people with relatives who have ended up in a care home 200 miles away – because they can’t find anything closer.’

A woman in Cheshire told the charity she contacted more than 30 homes before finding one suita- ble to accept her mother, r, who had vascular demenntia. Another caller was told ld by a manager they could no l onger meet her mother’s deteriorat­ing needs and she should instead employ a 24-hour carer at a cost of £8,000 a month.

Some 929,000 people in Britain have dementia, with the number forecast to more than double to reach two million by 2050. Mr Hughes said demand was increasing because of an ageing population and the fact fewer people live near their ageing parents. ‘Meanwhile, the number of care homes has gone down. d And [ social care] funding has also not kept pace with the greater numbers. So we have all these things conspiring together to create a crisis.’

A report by healthcare industry analysts LaingBuiss­on last month showed that in the past decade, 929 care homes, housing more than 30,000 pensioners, have closed.

Some care homes are also refusing to take residents with advanced dementia back in if they have to go to hospital for any reason. The

‘They ended up in a care home 200 miles away’

NHS ends up picking up the bill, with dementia patients staying in hospital an average of seven times longer than other people, at a cost of about £300 a day.

Nadra Ahmed, chairman of the National Care Associatio­n, representi­ng small and medium care providers, said: ‘Providers aim to give the best care they can so they will do that by only taking residents whose needs can be easily met by the staff and the funding envelope.’

There are no regulation­s stipulatin­g that care homes must take people with dementia.

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